Xhurztey, mcrch 11, 1970 P23 12 n on P nsp iiWL JLI I J '5 : r By CI3 Roberts t JooJt of Men: llsbns of the Male Experience, edited by Ross Firestone StonehiH PubEshicg Cb New York, $555. Marc and Bren&a Fefeea Fasteau shed a little Ifht on ta Important problem last week when they spoke at UNL about the need to change the ro!e of men and women in American society. Marc said men need to break out of the "John Wayne' bnzs cf "strong, silent, and boring masculinity, a true observation but superficial. What we really need are some insightful observations of the male role in American society. If that role were de fined beyond the ordinary stereotype, we could truly numinate the basic question raised by the Feigca Fasteaus: to what extent, and with what validity, are our societal roles determined by our sex. The subject is too big for a Iecture-a good book is what we need. So it is disappointing that A Book of Mem Visions of the Male Experience, which addresses itself to just that question, is only a fair book. Four sections Editor Firestone selects personal writings-autobio graphies, letters and the Iike-of famous 20th century After Magritte and The Real Inspector Hound, written by the playwright who won recognition for his full-length BCSnrI obfoO mi IdIa frof pby Rosencrsntz and GuMenztcm Are Dead, will open U III Oldie? O IIIUOlLr II KZCLl Friday at the Lincoln Community Playhouse. The two one-act comedies by Tom Stoppard are dir- men. lie orpnizes them into four sections: Sons, Lovers, Husbands and Fathers. The distinctions are interesting because they surest there are certain roles men must play in any society. Cut the distinction between lovers ami husbands is thin, and sometimes seems to have been made only to provide space for more juicy erotic passages. Most of the selections were written before the feminist movement began and, except that they mention radios and automobiles, might as well have been written hundreds of years ago. Why then. limit the choke of material to that written in the past 76 years? Why not go further back for better stuff? Another g?e ;' Another gripe concerns some of the selections. Norman Mailer, who has much to say on malcness, is represented by a snippet from an interview. Mailer talks about mastur bation, and then one wonders why Phillip Roth, who said so much on that subject in Portnos Complaint and else where, wasn't included. . , , f , , A mechanical flaw of Book of Men is its lack of authors Introduction. In spite of these faults, the book succeeds in places. The most striking example is a selection in the Fathers category by, of all people, W.C. Fields. Forget the screen image of Fields s cutting sarcasm. This letter to his divorced wife about the rearing of their son is full of blunt rage. It vibrates with the human con cern of parenthood, and the stereotype of maternal in stinct .is as relevant to Fields' situation as the man in the moon. The Fields selection illustrates our problem: finding where the stereotype ends and where the real role of, say, fatherhood, begins. But because the idea of the book is so gdod and so timely, it's a shame the editor didn't do a better job. Two off -heat comedies open Friday The 130-member . UNL Collegiate Band will per form seven works by North American composers today at 8 pan. in Kimball Recital tmo Band. for Trumpet and Robert Fought, UNL as sociate professor of saxo- HalL A highlight of the free phone and band director, formance by Dennis and "An Original Suite." bv u W ected by John Wilson, and wEl play on weekends from opening eight to March 28, with evening performances at 8 pan. After Magritte concerns a couple who are professional ballroom dancers. Since they practice in the livingroom of their tiny apartment, the wife's tuba-playing mother must take her nap on an ironing board located in the room. Matters worsen after the husband realizes that the Schneider, UNL professor Gordon Jacob, "Three Cam- woman on the ironing board is really his mother and that ox orass instruments, oi Martin Mailman's "Concer- a ) CAROL KANE in JOAN ftXKUN SAVER'S 5F v V 1 1 'if o Jr 8 STGTS 8 FT-T-IV g FlCZft 8 I J j eos, by J area Spears, the Inspector Foot of Scotland Yard has arrived to arrest him "Four Freedoms' march by for a crime that he is almost sure he did not commit. Edwin Franko Goldman, Don Renaud and Amy Thelander play the couple; and "Panorama for Band, Dottie Stoesz is the mother; Inspector Hound is played by by Rex MitchelL Larry Zoucha, and John Flanagan plays Holmes, a novice O O I" detective from Scotland Yard. , The second piece is a crazy whodunit? Moon and Birdfoot, two theatre critics, attend a play at Muldoon Manor, an eerie old house standing alone amid the coastal region's desolate marshes and treacherous cliffs. Radio reports say an escaped lunatic is believed to be in the area. Just as the fog rolls in, making the mansion inaccessible to help, a man matching the description of the marauder enters. Renaud and Zoucha from the first comedy also play the theatre critics, while Mildred Bailey is the maid (Kirs. Drudge); Shelley Lahman is Lady Muldoon; Carol McVey is Felicity Cunningham, tennis playing houseguest of Lady Muldoon; Gale Curtright plays Inspector Hound; Lee Aronsohn is the 'lunatic" Simon, and Rod McCuHough plays Magnus, the wheel-chair ridden half-brother of "her ladyship's husband, Lord Albert Muldoon." " Reservations for these two light comedies can be made by calling the playhouse at 489-9608. ; v jiiii Goods y :OESIFMTHMI Vz Prised Dzcnls : For Girls Timrcy fech 11 Ds co rated Cokes SnocEis Sandwiches Open 24 Hrs.Mon-Fri. Sat. til 8 p.m. Closed Sun. 271 h G "O" St. O II o o o o o n o o o o o 1i SPRING RISE R,JVTCH U? COIN'S SSEVHIRE Fca s?rt:::3 cieax? . . Look for lha Sprirvj Rkl tatch-Ugi fastur in Ctassi?MRj starting CLarch 15 Just f il out th coupon, in tS March 12th, 11th, & 12th issutsof the RAG. Only 8 cents pr word. ' No fclinimum,, for this siciil Spring Brask swvico of tha Dty riebraskan. City Center Acting Company '.J;v?.v.f r , ; it An exciting new musicd ooa uzren io. 19 a 22 0 p.m. A fairy t&to fantasy set in the happy land of the Mississippi Delta. Some persons may find a segment of this production of fensive. Parental discretion ad- March 2Q2&Qp Dy v;.arn Ccngrcve A subtle comical cxarrinaan of ideal love and marriage. KirnaariCexOrnee ' 113t:usieB:d3.1iaR. Hecpes. Gateway - ;. C.-ande!s, Dcvntcvn U::t Students: t p!ay-2.50. Ceth plays- 4.C3 1 p!ay-4.C0. Beth p!ays- 7.C0 r-t .f frcm Mw York Of 3 v i W- - : ; ( . s, V " V -I . f a coioiceiirt' plus 1AR g mm a 'Be- i.Hi II.MLU 4 They ere funny; they era fcrCHent; they era -VILLAGE VOICE f -h F-? :u pan R m bk iJi ! if ta.. jt a 4 IC3 C-L.C r J f1 L J 4 it, 9 v 1