v): v i. ' 5 4 ' 5 - '. f 4 t ' t , 5 ' f , ' I : '" ' A "J ' Jf J, 'J The response from last week's column was really great. As a matter of fact, it was one of the largest mail responses received by the Daily Nebraskan from a single news article. Thanks! . . , , , . In case you don't know what I'm talking about, last week 1 asked for public response to the idea of bringing the musical Hair to Lincoln next fall. Well, as I said, the response was very good. There was not a single response from anyone opposing the idea of bringing Hair in In fact, not only was the student response large, but I also got favorable response from the University faculty and even from four Lincoln attorneys. Now to the point which I assume everyone is interested in, is Hair coming to Lincoln? I don't know yet. The Pershing Auditorium board will vote on the matter Tuesday, April 6, to decide for certain, but I can say that the situation looks very very good. Keep your eyes open for next Wednesday s newspaper, I should have something definite for you by then. Thanks again for the tremendous response. Blood, Sweat and Tears will be at Pershing Auditorium Saturday, at 8 p.m. and on April 16, Rod McKuen will be there. Get your tickets now! Tommy, the Kosmet Club's latest production, will be presented Friday, and Saturday, April 3, at 8 p.m. in the NU Coliseum. ' Under the Yum Yum Tree is going into its final weekend at the Lincoln Community Playhouse. Of interest to people with cars, Sly and The Family Stone will be in concert at Ames, Iowa at the Iowa State University Armory on Friday, April 2, at 8:30 p.m. and Saturday, April 3, at 7:30 p.m. It would most certainly be worth the trip. Wagner's last opera, Parsifal, will be broadcast Saturday, April 3, beginning at 12 noon and will be heard locally over KRNU (fm) (90.3 mc). Featured will be Irene Dalis as Kundry, Sandor Konya as Parsifal, Cesare Siepi as Gurnemanz, Thomas Stewart as Amfortas, Morley Meredith as Klignsor and John Macurday as Titurel. Leopold Ludwig will conduct. inosaur flick is bad from all angles MM Review by RICHARD BOOHAR Warner Brother's When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth could be reviewed from many standpoints. It doesn't really matter which, because it's bad no matter how you look at it. From a conventional angle, it's a prehistoric skinflick in which Sanna, the silver-haired sacrificial maideit played by Victoria Vetri, escapes her fate and everyone devotes the rest of the movie to hunting her down lest some terrible fate befall the tribe. EVERY SCENE is filled with actual or impending violence, with semi-undressed savages screaming, shouting or moaning monosyllables as the situation warrants. Only rarely is there any visible connection between any two scenes, and sometimes there appears to be little relationship between parts of a sinele scene. I was asked, however, to consider the film as science fiction, and from the standpoint of legitimate science fiction at least, that is one thing this cinematic horror ain't. Not only are we asked to swallow the paleontologically horrendous juxta position of humans and dinosaurs in geologic time, wc have to accept the notion that both existed "when there was no moon." The moon's place is occupied by a writhingly vaporous apparition in the sky, and one gets the impression that the catastrophe which wipes out the bad guys at the end is somehow related to the birth of the friendly old moon as we know it. Before that occurs, however, we have to sit through Sanna' s history-making domestication of a carnivorous reptile big enough to have her for an hors d'oeuvre and her subsequent gambols with a baby dinosaur which acts like an overgrown puppy. The list could go on and on-these are just some outstanding examples- but they illustrate my primary point. LEGITIMATE SCIENCE fiction involves at least some attempt to produce versimilitude by some standard. Nowhere in When Dinosaurs Rules the Earth is there the slightest suggestion that anyone paid attention to any aspect of scientific accuracy. The flying reptiles still fly swiftly on slow-moving wings, the jungle monster of The Lust World still crashes through the same jungle (oddly out of place in a mostly arid landscape) and dinosaurs with the most astonishing combinations of (jEnferan age cf unknown terrors, isafian ocrsfilp and virgin sacrifice... j "TOMMY CAN YOU SEE ME" ... sings Danny Kosmet Klub's production of the musical Tommy. gigantic strength and great weakness, thunderous stupidity and doglike intelligence pop up behind the nearest rock whenever the viewer is temporarily seated with staring at Vetri's voluptuously glowing flesh. In summary, it is difficult to see how anyone could find something enjoyable about this film, unless he just plain likes skinflicks. Laugh about it, shout about it. . . Thursday's Hyde Park will be devoted to major platform presentations and a debate between ASUN presidential contenders. The program will begin at 3:30 p.m. in the Nebraska Union lounge. miftfi m THE ACTING is non-existent, and Vetri's is noticeably worse only because we see more of her than anyone else. The direction is typified by a late chase scene which really should have been filmed on several different planets to get the wide variety of terrains and climates through which the hero and heroine pass on foot. See it if you wish, but as a courtesy to science fiction fans, don't blame this monster-osity on science fiction. ISSUE: Joint Treaty of Peace E(017 THE ISSUE AND VOTE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7 SPRING GENERAL ELECTION ASSOCIATION OF STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA (ASUN) The following issue will be on the April 7 Spring ballot: EXPRESS YOUR OPINION: I favor the Joint Treaty of Peace I oppose Joint Treaty ol Peace Between the People of the United State and the People ol South Vietnam and North Vietnam hWv W hrarfc nr aW mm kAri I TW Wtw mjn TW V (Mar , M mm Urn mu U f TW mm -w 4mm. rwtal bn M Agrii-uliure and Home Ettmomin Mudcnts vmr ai hi Union Irom 8iM) a.m.-V00 pm and I hen u City Union All other uU-nn vote Gty it Meldon as the hawker in 4JU-Ln-nj-ui - - - -"--- AT 8:00 PX1 ALL SEATS RESERVED! $6-$5-$4 Box Office Open 12-6 P.M. fflSNIKI MMCIMl lUDITOBIUITJ the Joint Treat)' of Peace i TW (vniw pIMtp tmrmd mm umdtm, I mmr Loun from MX) p.m.-Xtf) pm Union Umnec Irom 800 jm.-HIO p.m. wjmHi ml TMwftt-kUrai mm k TW iw . W ,mmm fww mt rWtw m mhmh Jt Wm Kapnill In. 1 TW mm ViMMfv pWW? rmw, WM ml (MmWk m mwmr W Wl ,mmm,tum Hit (W I . m ' - ' . . 1 frm md wMnW. ml tm mm I ill t , m m.md ! mvmJ i- -4 W tm,mwwl,2L "' " " mmrtmt mm. n. HmW mwmmi wr yUf mtmd (W M mt "" if- m mm m M - lnii.nw tmi .mil f" mm .nil ( mm -. tmd pmlm WW ml W .ih M r 'AGE 4 THURSDAY. APRIL 1. 1971 I I THE DAILY NEBRASKAN