Newspaper Page Text
Pag* 2
The Red and Black. Wednesday. May 17. 1972
by Phil Sanderlin
7 p.m. Kundalini Yoga.
School on Collrtr Ave. Rnng rug or
Dai In I
H p.m. Baha'i Club. 411
Memorial.
H p.m. Seminar, Sociology of
American Jewry. Ilillel h oundation.
THURSDAY. MAY 18
530 p.m. — Soccer
practice, Myers Quadrangle.
*. to p m C ire la K
Memorial.
ti:30 p.m. Campus Gold, for
college age Girl Scouta, Mental
Retardation Center. College Station
Road.
H 15 p.m. Social Work Club.
Student lounge, Candler.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Toothbrushes are badly needed
bv dentists who are trying to set up
dental clinics in Bangladesh. To
contribute toothbrushes or money
send to CAS Hank. Gigi's or
Pedro's
StudenU interested in applying
for staff positions on "The Georgia
Impression" leave name,
qualifications and statement of
liurpose in the Impression office.
Activities Center. Memorial by
Friday. Positions available editor,
managing editor, business manager,
copy editor. Iiterarv editor and
other positions. Editor and
managing editor must be of a least
lunior status for 1972-73 year
Mpli.i fU Omega will be
collecting anv books and maga/ines
for the Milledgeville Youth Center
for the rest of the quarter. Contact
Steve Pearce 2-4310
All kinds of literature are
needed for prisoner's library at
Attica State prison. Textbooks are
urgently needed as well as fiction,
non-fiction and religious works.
Send to School l.ibrary/Educa-
tional Department. Attica State
Prison. Attention of Mr. Dickerson,
Box 141*. Attica. New York. 14011.
AT MEMORIAL
Student works on exhibit
By CAROL ROBLRTS
Managing Editor
The 35 student art pieces
now on display at The Gallery
in Memorial Hall are generally
poorer in quality than one
would expect of a collection of
the better works of University
students.
The exhibit, which is called
“Art Collage," and which will
be at The Gallery through
Friday, consists of oil
paintings, charcoal drawings,
sculpture, poster work and
photography
Dance group offers free
lecture demonstrations
Members of the University
Concert Dance (iroup of the
Department of Physical
Education for Women will
offer a free lecture
demonstration tonight at 7:30
in the west gym of Women’s P.E.
Building.
The program will include
Symphony
performs
I he University’s Symphony
Orchestra under the direction of
J Kimball llarnman will
perform its annual Concerto
Concert Thursday, May 18, at
8 pm. in the Fine Arts
Auditorium
The program includes
Beethoven's "Consecration of
the House Overture,"
Mendelssohn's "St. Paul" and
Verdi’s "La Traviata."
Solos will he performed by
Radial McCallum. flute;
Richard Burrell, tenor, Priscilla
Rayburn, flute and Mary Rose
l.onghine, piano.
Ilarriman, associate
professor of music, conducts
the orchestra He i a graduate
ot University ot North Carolina
and Columbia University and a
joint staff member of the
Music Department and the
Center for Continuing
Education.
I he public is invited There
is no admission charge
two dances from the Concert
Dance Group’s spring concert
and a sample technique and
improvisation class. Dance
majors Linda Kabhan and Pam
Strong will conduct the
technique class and narrate the
program.
The purpose of the lecture
demonstration is "to present
dance as it occurs in the life of
the dancer," according to Alita
Kobnak, the Group’s director.
The two dances were
chosen from the concert
repertoire, she said, to contrast
two very different styles of
movement.
Senior dance majors Sallie
Wood and Chuck Skalko
choreographed the dances
which will appear tonight as a
part of their required
curriculum. Ms. Wood's group
modern dance, "Sigh,” is
choreographed to John
Lennon's "Imagine." Entitled
“Soloes in Solo, Duet, and Trio
Form," Skalko’s dance features
sharp, stylized movement to
the accompaniment of Bach’s
"Brandenburg Concerto no.
4."
The Concert Dance Group
meets twice weekly for
technique classes. Interested
students who are not dance
majors may audition for the
group
The mam objective of
technique class is "establishing
a strong unified group whose
goal is achieved each spring in
the form of a concert,” Ms.
Kobnak said
The works by the four
winners of Awards of Merit in
the showing are the most
outstanding of the group. A
series of “Skyhook" drawings
by Charles Massey Jr,, winner
of several awards outside the
University, is interesting for its
originality, its simplicity, its
pleasing texture and its soft
photographic tones.
Sherrill Fskew’s two works
of an architectural nature are
visually pleasing for their
simplicity and color, but the
messages she hopes to get
across to her viewers are
obscure at best.
IN CONTRAST TO Ms
Fskew’s simple designs are the
more complicated “machines"
by W L. Jose Sinclair.
Sinclair’s works are more
striking than those done by Ms.
Fskew, primarily because of
their vivid, deep colors and
their intricate designs.
Two of the more original
works in the exhibit, those
done by Karen Wantuck, have
a unique poster-like quality
with bright colors and an
unusual negative effect as a
background. The uniqueness of
her medium combined with the
realistic quality of her drawings
make these works stand out
from the rest of the exhibit.
One work by an artist not
receiving an Award of Merit
deserves mention. "The
Nakoosa River” by Brad
Sanders is a modem depiction
of nature which uses only three
basic colors. The effect of the
colors and of the painting’s
formally balanced composition
is to convey a feeling of peace
and order.
The exhibition lacks most
noticeably in the quality of the
photography included. Of the
eight photographs in the
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TWO i OCATIONS
107© W BROAD
And
17* OAK SI.
showing, only two are
representative of the quality of
photography being done by
University students. Those two
are “La Vieja” by Robbie O.
Hattaway and a photo of
a ghetto dweller backed by
Atlanta skyscrapers by Wayne
Roberts. The rest are not as
good as much of the
photography being done by
other students.
An exhibition of the better
works by student artists was a
good idea. But the judges and
officials of the University
Union Union might have used
more discretion in choosing the
works to be shown. When only
35 works are to be included,
the resulting exhibit should be
much better than the “Art
Collage” now being shown.
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ART COLLAGE EXHIBIT FEATURES STUDENT WORK
Gallery showing includes paintings, sculpture, photography
For $95 you’d fly anything,
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