f ;..J. ' ''-'V .;.!''. -Hrjfifi J pQ&ft Summer Nebfaskati, Thursday, July 1 2, 1970 i . i: "' ' - A ' what's up weekly? Thursday July 12 Crown Bag Lecture Lynn Shite, Asst. Professor Bocialogy and Director Bureau of Sociological Research. Speaking on! The Future of the Great Plains: Popula tion and Quality of Life." "The Merry Widow" operetta begins tonight. 8 p.m. at Kimball Hail. Showings Friday and Saturday nights Matinee Sun day at 3 p.m. ' i i i "Who's Happy Now?'. 8 p.w. in the Studio Theatre. Ticket are $4.50. Sheldon Film Theatert Thieves Like Us Directed by Robert Altman. Starring Keith Carradine and Shelly Duvall. Screenings at 7 and 0:16 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday matinees at 3 p.m. Admission charged. Friday July IS Last day of First Summer Session. ASUN meeting -6:30 p.m. Nebraska Union. Chinese vets tour Neb. "Take Me Along 8 p.m. Howell Theater. ? . Saturday, July 14 ' "Kiss Me Kate' 8 p.m. in the Howell Theater. , - Tttesday July IT , Pibners of Modern Painting: Edouard Manet .-".v-f '-J: Wednesday July II . . Great Plains Experience: The Heirs to No Man's Land; Romeo and Juliet East Street (1917, Charlie Chaplin) Thursday, July 19 Brown Bag Lecturei Dr. John Janovy, Jr., Professor of School of Life Sciences, speaking on: Exceedingly wild ideas about Teaching and Learning. Sheldon Film Gallery: California Split. Screenings at 7 and 9:16 p.m. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday matinees at 3 p.m. Admission charged. Chinese veterinarians text week will get a first hind look at Nebraska iwine operations while on a nationwide agricultural tour. They are one of two Chinese agrieultural And tf At!-1 " VVho'G Happy TTiurs., Ju!y 2 Fri:,Jary13 f . July 14 C:C0 p.nt ,. 47M27: delegations assisted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture who will begin separate U.S. tours this month, according to United Press International. The veterinarians, the first Chinese visitors to come under an American Chinese science and technology agreement, beginning Wednesday will visit commercial, govern ment and university animal and research complexes in Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas, Texas, Indiana, Georgia, Florida and Maryland, UP1 said. Dr. Alex Hogg, Universi ty of Nebraska professor and veterinarian will lead the Nebraska tour July 12 and 13. He said the delega tion main interest is swine, because the Chinese raise 230 million hogs an- nually, compared to the 80 million raised in the United States. On July 12, the six visitors will tour Norden Laboratories in Lincoln and the university's veterinary science cmoplex. Among stops the next day will be Willard Waldo's DeWitt swine operation and a Nebraksa pork packing plant. The second group will study seeds and plant research at commercial, University and government centers in Maryland, Iowa, Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Washington, Oregon and California; beginning July fcUPIsaid. An American delegation will visit China early this fall, but dates and par ticipants have not been decided. :::::::::::::: ::::: : : : : :: " KW:i!iii!iiiijilp !!i!! 1:::::: BrowivBag Lecture Lynn White, Asst. Professor Sociology & Bureau of Sociological Research Director Speaking on: "The future of The Great Plains: Population And Quality pf life. Thurs.. Tulv 11 12:00 Dm. 1 Nebraska Union Wain Lounge rv .::::::;::;:::::::::::: (rfl'.'ll . . :ix;x VWv!:!:!:5:ia:5:5:!:!: :!:5:-::::a:::::::: ,:t;;,w::,!, !!it.!... .;: .: ;;;! : ;::::::::: : : : ::::: :i:i::'jJp:.v?5' ' ' ' l ' i 'JP ' A 'iJr live Music This Wedend HIDDENVALLEY: 1 R ' (countryswing) fufl bar afid diaina fadlitics - (2 tnSes east of S4th on Hr.daks Roai) 4 it' ' f n ,1 ' . 4 j ,". ? i , . t(j '' t.'f ; A.. V . . i . it' V !L S r .... n- p , ; ; . ": . '.'S U V'V,.. !.,' I j ,i f .-,,1 . , i ' " U , h) " ' ' .f i V ..--. '5 ' ;: : ; ,i H ' "J , 4,'.' n 1 fnnnf i Jf f v r f " ri f . i I if r I 111 ji M ' if a t i iL , v f '" """""""I (- , n f- ( . J, 7, f $ ' Ckfiirea pliy en the bwn by the Ct&seea. photd by SheQey Sclth Intricate novel 'Bloodline' rednaced to 'who's on iwstf By L. Kent Vt!taott At sporting events it is often said you tan't tell the players without a program. In the movie BtoodUne, you can't even tell the ballpark you are in, let alone trying to figure who is playing. Bloodline is the movie adaptation of the Sidney Sheldon novel of the same title, and as a novel the plot appears to have great potential. However, Laird Koenig't screenplay is at best, confusing. The audience gets a European tour as it watches scenes tut from London to Paris to Zurich to Sardinia to Rome with few connections to be found. Ptejpocj effect And because of the pingpong ball effect of the scene setting, it is nearly impossible to sufficiently understand the miriad of characters the movie presents. Director Tern nee -Young does little to dear the confusion, and the movie lacks both drama and suspense, although it in tends Co have them. A retelling of the plot would take up more space than is available in this newspaper and would do the same damage to Sheldon's original as the Koenig screenplay. ' . But, suffice it to say that the plot is as confusing as the scenery. Subplot is pOed upon subplot and none U clearly resolved except for the melodramatic ending. It is difficult to say much about the ac ting in such a movie because it Is hard to determine if the performances tail because of the actor or because of the nature of the CI fated project . : ' . 'r,. Audrey Hepburn aa heiress Elizabeth Hctfe is the subject of the movie's attemp ted murders and can easily play a frighten ed nearly helplcis woman, witness her , performance la TTicit Until Dark But the bouncing plot leaves her In this situation infrequently, and the attempts on her life fail to bring much reaction. Ben Gamra as the mysterious Rhys Williams, who becomes Elizabeth's hus band, suffers much the same fate as his mystery fades into confusion. review The cousins, Sir Alec played by James Mason; Ivor, Omar Sharif and Helen, Romy Schneider also languish in confu sion. Appearing first here and then there, they dont have a chance to develop their characters. "Snufr movie Only Gert Frobe as the dischevled In spector Max Hornung of the Swiss Police survives the drift into obscurity and . presents a good portrayal of an understan dable character. The movie earns its R rating from a series of scenes showing the filming of a pornographic "snuff movie. A "snuff" movie has as its ending the killing of one of the participants, usually a woman. In this case, the women are strangled after they have had a red ribbon tied around their throats, (hence the ad for the movie). ': , This lapse into sex for its own sake is loosely tied onto the movie because the family member who does the killing is the producer of these movies. s But one "snuff scene would have been more than sufficient. . . It was probably a grave error to even at tempt to lift such a complex plot from the printed page and onto the acreen. ' The plot, has great potential, but Sheldon's book BloodUmi must be where the potential is realized, for the movie fails, miserably. '