f r Performing staff -.upset by plan for hall Sketch by Jodi Kopf Izenour's plan for the performing arts center calls for a moveable ceiling that can be pulled forward to change the size of the theater. When the top ceiling section is lowered, area A will disappear leaving only 2 sections of audience space. Likewise, when the middle ceiling section is lowered only audience section C will be used. By Lucy Lien Last year a Yale theater consultant, George Izenour, was hired to make recom mendations on a performing; arts center. This center was to be designed for use by the University of Nebraska and the community. Now theatre and music staff are worried that the Izenour plan will be used. If his plan is accepted, said Jerry Lewis, technical director at Howe!! Theater, as badly as a new theater is needed, theatre people would get so little use out of Izenour's complex that it would almost be better not to build a new complex at all. Izenour's plan for the per forming arts center, said Lewis, involves the use of a moveable ceiling which is used to fhanpi the seating capacity of the center. There would be only one main performing area, to be shared by University and community theatre groups, traveling actors and musicians, and by personnel in the NU music, opera and dance disciplines. Lewis pointed out that because so many areas would be sharing the center, the performers would not have access to the stage for rehearsals, but only for actual pv r fv r til I? c c 9 . I5e-ause of this, he said, the quality of the NU performances would probably go down. This concept of a shared center, he said, "makes all user essen tially renters." NU music director David Fowler noted that J. i,i.ir "did a thorough job of evaluating the coliseum. He showed the impraetkality of spending: that much money to renovate it for use by the performing arts. That phase of his job was done well. "Then he proceeded to try to sell us oh a multilevel facility." fowler and 1a-wis both noted that Izenour's designs hav? worked well for community theater and for traveling shows. However, his plan js too restrictive for use by educa tional purposes, they said. X.37X If Izenour's plans were accepted, Lewis said, Howell theatre would be torn down and in its place a "black box studio theater", would ..be .built . X&is smaller theater would be used for the educational and experi mental plays now produced in ' Howell. This type of theater, he said, "implies that a particular type of production would be pro duced there. We couldn't produce anything that involved elaborate drops like the ones used in this summer's pro duction of 'Mary Sunshine'." Large productions would be performed at the complex under this plan, but rehearsals and set design would have to be done elsewhere. "In the theatre," he said, "there is a great deal of value in - being able to rehearse and set up sets on the same stage. At the University of Wisconsin they have to do all the preliminaries elsewhere arid the quality of their perform ances has suffered." Fowler agreed that "when you mount a number of productions you need more stages, you need space to rehearse and set up the stage. "In order to mount the opera we need to be on stage at least three weeks to set up the i s .. .. .it,. even before on -stage rehearsals begin." Lewis explained that the Idea behind Izenour's design is that it in wasteful to have a theater that is not in use every night of the year. However, h said, although there are perform ances in Howell only about 90 nights in a year, it is In use ' almost every day for rehearsals and student activities. Another problem with Izenour's plan, Lewis said, is that the . smallest area that could be formed In the theater' would have a &00 seat capacity, "A 800-seat capacity is hardly what we consider intimate theatre," he said. Because on a weeknight per formance there are often 200 perjwjns in the 'audience, it could be expected that a like B -rpCl,,,,.,,j number would attend perform ances In the new complex. "It would be a psychological disaster to the performers to eoran '-on -stage : and-. scp 700 empty eetsf" he eaid. Howell presently seats about 800. With such a large theater, he said, it would probably be half empty all the time. Con sequently, performances would suffer, especially if a play which needs audible audience res ponse to be successful, such as a comedy, were performed there. He noted that the flexible theatre design is "unfortun ately the way it's done in professional theatre, but this may not be the best way." He asserted that the need for a new performing arts center is great. "I'm very happy that President Varner is pursuing this concept," he said, "but I By Lynn SUliasck While many students spend their free summer time relax ing or vacationing, UN-L senior, Tom Mullen, spends his x walking nearly ten miles a day, distributing doorhangers to Lincoln homes that urge occu- . . r . . .. i - paum few etcck nvB9 uj& Congress. He works &ix hours a day at the Dyas campaign head" quarters, helping plan a sched ule of neighborhood coffees throughout the city for the First District candidate. Or he phone-canvasses voter for their opinions on Nebraska's congressional representation. Mullen and others like him working on political campaigns number a handful of people. But by licking envelopes, arranging meetings, running errands and canvassing voters, they are helping establish groundwork for one fall guber natorial and for both First Congressional District cam paigns. Nearly 60 percent of the work done so far in the Dyas Democratic hid for Congress don't like the specific plan presented. Izenour is a reput able consultant but he only does this type of thing. He doesn't like facilities with different areas for different, areas of performance." He noted that he would like to see the hiring of at least one more consultant before pro ceeding on the building of the center. Fowler said that he is "highly enthusiastic about getting the kind of performing hall the campus and community need, and we need a place for major productions like the St. Louis symphony. If we don't build one of these performing areas in the next couple of years," he said, "we'll be one of the few areas in the country without one. It's not an unusual suggestion," He said he hoped that more consultants would be brought in to make recommendations before the architect proceeds with the building. He urged that among the consultants brought in would be an experienced manager of a facility that is , already being used by the community and the university. This manager could point out items that make the cehter economical to operate, he said. NU President Durwood Varner said he agreed with the theatre and music personnel. . "I'm in complete agreement with them," he said. "Their position is very logical and I would defend that position. Recruiter seeks' teachers A recruiter from New South Wales, Australia will be in the University of Nebraska Teacher Placement Office on July 18, July 19, and the morning of has been done by students, said campaign manager, Dick Kurt enbach. Students, along, with UN-L instructors, form CO percent of the campaign's 250-man volunteer force, ac cording to Lancaster County campaign organizer, Jack Casnidy. The work students have - '5 f i L I i i .V , nt campaigning Tom Muikn, a senior at NU, works over material at the iiess Dyas campaign headquarters. "I think they're right. The quality of performances would go down in the theatre if they were moved to a complex designed according to Izenour's concept." He said he hoped to hire an architect who would then call in a number of consultants before drawing up the final plans. Before the architect can be hired, he said, "We need to get over the financial hurdles of building the center." Izenour's recommendations were very useful, he said, "but I do not see having a place where the theatre people don't even have their own stage." He said he hopes the plans for the complex will be finalized within a year. Fowler said that in order to convince potential financial backers of the center's feasa bility, the Lincoln campus needed to "get on the band wagon and actively support it. ' "I would hope that the , Lincoln campus will be moving forward on its responsibility to get this plan moving." He also recommended that the new center would have adequate parking. "Another factor which is more important than is thought, he said, "is having a gracious and beautiful atmosphere for a concert. The modern audience would not be satisfied with a facility that was not attractive." He also urged that building be started on the hall as soon as possible, because with current increases in inflation building costs are soaring. July 20 from 9:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Anyone interested in interviewing with him should contact the Teacher Placement Office at 472 2212, 2214 or 2215. accomplished includes phone canvassing to determine what issues will persuade people to vote, arranging neighborhood coffees where Dyas meets informally with voters and distributing doorhangers, Kurtenbach said. In auuiiiwn iu office work, (Continued on Page 3) !"1 "X. 1 . r J i t 4 L fc. A. 4. jj. A,,d,..4. ,,..Jh.is. (,, sh- -4 f , 4., V 4 i A - A. r tf , . i ..M-