monday, dscember 1, 1975 page 8 daily nebraskan QftS & up& coming ' W' , , , W.J William 's memoirs add insight dramas omitted On Campus Art Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery- 12th & R- Water colon by W.M. Dickerson through Dec. 8; Christmas Fair through JDac. 24. Film Sheldon Film Theater- 12th & R- (Classic Silent Films) General, Copt and One Week- Fri. and Sat.-3, 7 and 9 p.m. Student Union- 14th & R- (Foreign Films) Mid dle of the World- Tues., Wed. and Thurs.- 7 and 9:15 p.m. Music Kimball Recital- 11th & R- Karl Ravnan cello recital- Mon.- 8 p.m.; Faculty String Quartet- Tues.- 8 p.m.; Marching Band- Thurs.- 8 p.m.; Student Chamber Music- Fri.- 8 p.m. Student Union- 14th & R- Keith Jarrett Quartet-Sat.- 8 p.m.; Coliseum- 12th & Vine- Messiah-Sun.-8 p.m. Theater Howell Memorial Theater- 12th & R- The Cru-clble- Fri. end Sat- 8 p.m. Book review by Bill Roberts Memoirs, by Tennessee WilliamsDouble day & Co., Inc., Garden City, New York ,$8.95 When one of America's literary giants writes his memoirs, it's bound to be of some interest. The peculiar worth of Ten nessee Williams' Memoirs is that it is a dem onstration of the great dramatist's artistic methods. Memoirs is lengthy, uneven in style and tone, and jumps back and forth from past to present. It is the entire body of his full life, with all the extra skin and hair intact. This is in contrast to his plays, where Williams sliced away the unnecessary flesh of life and works with the muscles and bones of emotions. The plays, after reading Memoirs, seem like a distillation, a rewrite job, of his passionate life. For example, he drew on his close rela tionship with his mentally ill sister, Miss Rose, for the character of Laura in The Glass Menagerie. But he did it as a dramatic artist, not a biographer. ' v "Laura of Menagerie, n he explains, "was like Miss Rose only in her inescapable 'dif ference,' which that old female bobcat Amanda would not believe existed." As the story of a famous person's life, Memoirs, with help from 144 photographs, is satisfactory. Williams was ence intro duced, by Ernest Hemingway, to Cuban Premier Fidel Castro, and there are anec dotes about Tallulah Bankhead, Gore Art gallery offers films of Keaton Vidal, Elia Kazan and others. Williams tells about his drug and alcohol bouts in the 60s, which he lost and which eventually caused him to be hsopitalized. He writes that he changes his name from Thomas Lanier Williams in honor of his paternal grandfather, who tried and failed to be elected governor of Tennessee. Williams is frank to the point of boring the reader about his homosexual love life. Except for one 14-year affair, the play wright was promiscuous, and just to give his significant encounters fair mention takes up considerable space. With all the evidence of his sexual pref erences, the strong heterosexuality in his early plays becomes even more remarkable. Of course, to some extent the social cli mate of the 40s and 50s made the more conventional treatment of sexuality necessary. But one cannot say that the author of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof sold out. In all his work he was dedicated to honesty. Memoirs rounds out the truth of his plays and fiction, and helps the reader appreciate Williams accomplishments. "What is in these memoirs,'' Williams writes, "is mostly the barest periphery of that which is my intense life, for my in tense life is my work." Photo courtesy of Sheldon Film The Foreign Film Series will present the 1974 Swiss production, The Middle of the World, Tuesday-Thursday at 7 and 9:15 pjn. in the Nebraska Union Auditorium. The Middle of the World charts the day-by-day progress of a summertime affair be tween a free-spirited Italian waitress and a regimented Swiss politician. Sheldon's Classic Silent Film Series this week features the films of comedianactor, Buster Keaton: The General, Cops and One Tfvtatre Week. The General spoofs the espionage tactics during the Civil War. As both director and actor, Keaton's efforts are considered class ical by many film histrians. The Cops finds Keaton the innocent perpetrator of mass chaos within a police department. The General, Cops and One Week wUl be screened on Friday and Saturday at 3, 7and9pjn. Ragtime still selling Below are best sellers this week in Lincoln. Fiction: 1. The Greek Treasure, Stone 2. Ragtime, Doctorow 3. Beyond the Bedroom Wall, Woiwode 4. Choirboys, Wambaugh 5. The Eagle Has Landed, Higgins Non-fiction: 1. Vie Relaxation Response, Benson 2. The Peoples Almanac, Wallen chinsky 3. The Doonesbury Chronicles, Trudeau 4. Angels, Graham 5. Money, Galbraith List compiled from the five best selling books at B. Dal ton, The Neb raska Bookstore and Miller and Paine. That's what a Columban Father ia, He's a man who caree...and a man who shares. ..a man who reaches out to missions in Asia and laim America. . .to share the Good Newe that Jesus truly cares tor them. He's a man wno commits his life totally to others so they can live their lives as God intended. Being a columban mum Is a tough challenge., but if you think you have what It takes end are a Catholio young man, 1 7 to 29, write today tor our FRE18-Pag Booklet ON Ceiumban Fathers St CohMNbane, Nl MOM I am Interested In becoming a Catholic Missionary Priest. Please send m your booklet Jf!p ln i f V i i - - ? mn the- fii i:j EOTCOTAirJOEOT '.' 07 VJczt 4th -Frcmcnt (next to the Lsrint) FEATURINQ Starting Dec. 1st for TWO BIG WEEKS Winterize your body" Get Into The Silver Sounds of TERLSMG all this wedc H-Go-Go Contests Every WoJ. at ifcoo 2-fers & Nidde Draws Mone-Thurs. 6:30-8il5 The Royal Grove 340 W. eomhasker