moncfcy, mcrcb 29, 1970 'it- 12 half felrr. This week's television and movie highlights. Monday NCAA Basketball Champion ships (NCC. 7 pjnJUv cov er age of th coflegiat chanv ' pionsftips. .AVit Denver and Friend (ABC, 8 psnj Denver performs writti Frank Sinatra In trib ute to the big band era. Academy Awards (ADC, 9 pjmJI Waiter Matthau and Gen Kelley serve as masters of ceremonies. Tuesday Red Badge of Courage (NSC, 7 pjnj Richard Thomas stars In an adaptation of the Ste phen Crane novel. Liberty (NBC, 8:30 pjoj A study of the American right to liberty in another of the network's Bicentennial . salutes. The World At War (NETV, 8:30 pjn.) Inside the Reich, 1940 1944 focuses on German war-morale, production, re sistance and for some, life and business as usual. Wednesday The New Original Wonder Woman (ABC, 7 pjnj Film based on the heroine of the popular 1940s comic books. Magazine (CBS, 9 pjnj This news show for women In cludes interviews with wives of presidential hopefuls, a look at the Culinary Insti tute of America and a study of a 9-year-old boy in the foster care system. The Way It Was (NETV, 11:30 pjn J The 1943 World Series between the Cleveland In dians and the Boston Braves s is recalled by representatives of both teams. Thursday Double Solitaire (NETV. 8 pjn.) Robert Anderson's drama about marriage. Helter Skelter (CCS, 10:30 pjn.) George DiCenzo and Steven Raitsback star in dramatization of Vincent Bugfiosl and Curt Gentry' book about the Charles Man son "Family," Part 2 will be shown Friday night. Slaughterhouse Five (NSC, 8 pjn.) Kurt Vonnegut's novel about the firebombing of Dresden during World War II. Friday A Fistful of Dollars (ABC, 8 pjnj Clint Eastwood stars in this Italian western about a ruthless, mysterious stranger. Marooned (CBS, 8 p jn.) Mission control races against time and hurricanes to retrieve three astronauts trapped in space. Saturday Joe Carag tola's Baseball Special . NBC, 1:30 pjtt.) A preview of the major league baseball season. Sheldon Film Theatre is show ing Sambteanga March 30, 31 and April L A Jean Renoir film. La Regie Du Jeu (The Rules of the Game), will be shown April 2 and 3. Cable television will feature High Noon, the classic wes-. tern with Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly. Other cable movies include: Julius Cae sar, Divorce-Hers and Honey- moon with a Stranger. V V V'.' ' it it I i v - n-x 1 a - V --" '-i-m I','' f Ptota cour ties of tats Canfasft Baskets, designed by New Mexico artist Marge Bardacke, w2J be featured Tuesday at Sheldon Manorial Art Gallery's Art Shop in a special exhibit. Baskets, macrame are among exhibits opening Tuesday Forms in Fiber will open at the Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery's Art Shop on Tuesday at 8 pjn. The special open ing, a first for the Art Shop, will feature the baskets and macrame of Marge Ear da eke of Albuquerque, NJ-1. She studied art history and various crafts as a graduate student in the Design Dept. at the University of California at Berkeley, Bardacke said, I have since that time pursued mainly my interest in macrame and, more recently, in contemporary basketry, I have adapted the traditional Indian techniques of coiling and twining and applied them in a more contemporary context by my use of form, color and materials." Iter works have been exhibited in New Mexico, and exampLs of her work recently have been acquired for the permanent collection of Sheldon. Bardacke uses traditional methods and materials to create large and small baskets, vases, masks, urns and boxes. She uses such things as gourds, feathers, clay, wood and newspapers to create her forms. Bardacke will be here for her show's opening Tuesday night. The exhibit and opening are free and open to the public. Ongoing Amsricon rovoluvion f hm in 'Wisdom of the West' Symposium gcs i o :2lLJLJULLAj The ongoing American revolution will be a key theme in the UNL Symposium on the Wisdom of the West, open ing Wednesday and running through April 23, according to its coordinator, the Nebraska Union Program Council's Human Potentials Committee. The Symposium, developed as an interdisciplinary approach to the Bicentennial, includes a series of work shops and discussions, with lecture, film and performance also featured. , The schedule of events is: " - -March 31, 7:30 pjn. Nebraska Union Centennial Room-Indian Healing Ceremony. One of the oldest traditions of the Native American Indian will be explained and demonstrated by Medicine Man Stanley Red Bird and associates Joe Eagle Elk and Abel Stone. Arpil 1, 7:30 pjn., Union Ballroom Karl Hess: Dear America. Hess' recently published book, Dear America, is a passionate letter addressed to Americans asking them to reconsider the institutions which rule them, the customs by which they live and the social fabric of which every individual is an important component. -April 3, 8 aan. to 4 pjn. UMHE Commonplace, 333 N. 14th St. Workshop on Teaching Technique of Super Conscious Meditation. Swami Ajaya, formerly Dr. Allan Weinstock, is a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist, co-author of Yoga and Psychotherapy and author of Yoga Psycho by. Registration is $12 in advance, $15 the day of the workshop. - -April 5, 9, and 12 at 3, 7 and 9 pjn., Union Small AuditoriumThe Rebel in American Film. April 5 On the Waterfront, starring Marlon Brando. April 9 Casa blanca, featuring Humphrey Bogart. April 12-Rebel Without a Came, with James Dean. Admission to each ; rt J?' - ilWiip J i r t ; : j"iv V V. V It .1 " ' fLsta tstztssi tlot Yessa Fssa Ctzssi tzt Pcrtesca cdosatlra. Ca a Uajgzzs, tia Cia h the stcsy cf a pccIas b Czzh stie fcr showing is $1 25, 75 cents with student ID, April 6, 7:30 pjn. Union Ballroom Lincoln Impro visation Ensemble in Concert. This multi-media concert wfll demonstrate the possibilities in music and the methods performers can use to make a stateient through their art. . TApriI 8. AH day. Nebraska Union-Food Day. Dis plays, booths, lectures and panel discussions sponsored by the Nebraska Public Interest Research Group. April 13, 7:30 pjn. Union Small Auditorium An Evening of Native American Documentary Films. Com mentary on the Native American by three film-makers will be presented in the films, The Dispossessed, Little White Salmon Indian Settlement and Song for a Dead Warrior. . ' , April 15, 7:30 pjn. Centennial Room Chuck Mitchell in Concert. Chuck Mitchell is a traveling troubadour poet, actor singer and musician. - , - , 1 April 19, 7:30 pjn. Union Ballroom Introspections on Symbolic Americana. Artist Rainbow Touraine and . musician Philip White Hawk will present an evening of lectures, visuals, demonstrations and native American , music April 21, 7:30 pjn. Union BaHroom-The Zen of Seeing. Dr. Frederick Franck wfll suggest methods by which we may more actively experience the totality that is living- - -April 22, 7 pjn. UMHE Commonplace 333 N. 1 4th ' St. Workshop in Seeing Drawing as Meditation. Dr. Franck will conduct this workshop which he describes as "a unique experiment in seeing, of being in contact with the world around you." Registration costs $3 for UNL students, faculty and staff members and $5 for others. Film depicts pain of colonial Angola in violent rebellion Angola is the timely country featured in this week's " Foreign Film. Sambtanga, directed by Sarah Maldoror, will be shown at the Sheldon Film Theatre Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 1 and 9:15 pjn. Sambizanga is a film about the nationalist movement . that led to a militant uprising in Portuguese Angola in 1961. The story, based on the book by Angolan militant Luandino Viera, is about a construction worker who is an activist, although-not only his wife but others in the sophisticated network of the revolutionary movement don't know iL - Y.Tien he is arrested and imprisoned, his wife sets off in search of him. The underground learns of the arrest through its agents and there is a double effort to discover his whereabouts. . New York Magazine said, "With remarkable tension to support her simple story, Maldoror goes beyond plot to tdl us of a people's agony. And she does so in such a cine nutic sophistication, that we become deeply involved in what starts put as a near-travelogue documentary aboutv exotic people. "The Hin was made in the Congo with Angolan guerillas based there, and their nonprofessionalsim gives the film its remarkable sense of authenticity. "Domingos Oiiviera, as the huge, good-hearted and surface-stolid protagonist, gives a superb embodiment of the ordinary man turned political martyr; and Elisa Andrade, as his country wife, who quickly learns to cope with the political tyranny of bureaucrats, is deeply touching-and breathtaking lovely. "Vi'ith a very good supporting cast, they give universal truth to a fascinating story of a struggle for freedom.