Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 21, 1966, Page Six, Image 6

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Weekend Preview
£
By JAY TILLAPAUGH
Emerald Entertainment Editor
Students already quivering be
fore the bogeyman of midterms
can shake their way downtown
this weekend to “shudder” at
a couple of fright-filled shock
ers.
“Chamber of Horrors." with
a fear flasher and a horror horn
for fore-warning, is playing at
the McDonald. If the exploits of
a killer terrorizing Baltimore
don't shake you up. the co
feature, Alfred Hitchcock’s
“Psycho.” may—unless you saw
it in 1959.
Also for the goulish group.
“Seconds.” without a fear flash
er but with Rock Hudson and
Salome Jens, opened at the
Heilig. Since “the answer is too
terrifying for words," we’ll leave
Rock Hudson “in the hands of
a sinister international organi
zation”—that could be anything
from the PTA to SWINE these
days.
At the Fox, “Tiie Wrong Box,"
which has got to be a comedy, is
co-featured with Debbie Rey
nolds in “The Second Time
Around.” (And for Debbie it
seems like it is.)
Eugene's Newest
“Eugene's newest in-time
theatre." the 1085 at 1085 Oak
Street, schedules three showings
now — 7, 9, and 11, Friday
through Sunday. On tap this
weekend for silent screen en
thusiasts are six films starring
Rudolph Valentino, Douglas
Fairbanks, Mack Swaine, Andy
Clyde. D. W. Griffith, Mary Pick
ford, Lionel Barrymore, Ben
Turpin, Wallace Berry, and
Charlie Chaplin. With a list of
all-time greats like this, the
MAYFLOWER
Open 7:30 — Movie 8
HELD OVER!
6th WEEK
KiwnavmMm
IKvtiurwJi hujuuvn
DAVID LEANS FILM
Of eWttSWSTERKilKS ,
doctor /
Advance Tickets on Sale
Phone 345-1022
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YOU CAN—AS
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AIRLINES
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For more information
about this exciting life
write to:
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Seattle-Tacoma Int'l
Airport
Seattle, Washington
V
1805 is already upstaging the
theatres on Willamette Street.
On Campus Friday night,
George Orwell's “Animal Farm"
along with “Occurrence at Owl
Creek Bridge" are being shown
by CORE in 150 Science, with
admission priced at 75c.
Michael Sidney's "Dylan,” riot
ous episodes in the later years
of poet Dylan Thomas, opens to
night at the University Theatre
(see story this page).
Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.
oil the SU Terrace, the second
“Festival UO” swings into a five
hour open-air program of jazz,
poetry, flamenco, and folksing
ing While Eugene will never be
another Left Bank, the per
formers scheduled promise that
Eugene has left the Rock
Sprinp, Wyoming, category.
“Festival UO” sounds like fun
for all who despair at the arm
chair variety—good luck to a
welcome program.
Saturday Tame
Saturday night on campus
looks tame, with students having
a choice between a Bottom-of
the-Bowl Dance and the Iowa
String Quartet in the Little Con
cert Series at the Music School
auditorium.
Sunday, the SU movie at 2:30
and 8 p.m. is “Seven Days in
May." The Film Society shows
at 7 and 9:15 p.m. a 1933 musi
cal, “Gold Diggers of 1933.”
with Dick Powell, Joan Blon
dell, and Ginger Rogers.
Eugene offers art fans an in
terlude from midterms with two
new exhibits opening this week.
“Living With Art.” an exhibi
tion of paintings, drawings, and
prints by Oregon artists opened
yesterday at Rubenstein’s Furni
ture. Sponsored by the Friends
of the Museum, the exhibition
and art sale is open to the pub
lip stare hours
Two photographic surveys of
architecture, “40 under 40” and
“The Architecture of MLTW,”
exhibits the work of prominent
young architects (including Don
, lyn Lyndon, head of the Uni
!. versity Architecture Depart
ment) at the University Mu
seum of Art.
12th Street Gallery
For a whole weekend on the
arty side, check into the exhibits i
of three University grads at the:
12th Street Gallery and on:
Printmaker’s International at!
Maude Kerns Art Center.
Now for something really out
of the ordinary, “The Maestro 1
of Crime (Brings a Treacherous'
Time)” by 15-year-old Randy
Bowser of Eugene, plays tonight
and tomorrow on the “Batstage”
at Maude Kearns Art Center.
The Village Players, originally
started by University theatre
major Margaret Wilmot, present
this satire on a satire where
boistrous chases incorporate the
audience into the action.
Students should find some
where between the horror horn
and the Batstage something en
tertaining this weekend to take
their minds off the terrors of
next week.
4 DAYS! ENDS SATURDAY!
cDONALD
|IO?1 wmamvtl* SI. - 344-434)
6:15-8:20
Tnemniatretne
McDonald s Magic
Toils and Tro ubles
By STEVE DIM 150
Emrrald EiUrrtAinmrnt Kditor
This is that rarilied device com
monly ycleped Allegory.
Once upon a wasted time there
was a creature called Xof that
was scheduled to expose what it
had to offer to the critical natures
of a student adventurer conveni
ently but a little bi/arrely named
Rotide Tnemniatretne Dlareme
and his guest and comrade who
had managed to escape for an eve
ing with him for their cell in the
institution called Egelloc. .
Though the two had intended
to examine "The Wrong Box" Xof
was projecting. Xof spewed out
rather impolite Haines from its
mouth and said, "It is only you,
Rotide Incmniatretne Dlareme,
whom I will admit, not your guest
and comrade.”
Whereupon he and his guest
assumed that it was the wrong
box after all. They were not em
barrassed by the creature’s ob
jection to let them see its "Box,”
but they were enough of human
mettle to be duly offended.
Therefore Rotide Tnemnia
tretne Dlareme said, “If not the
two, then not the one.”
Pilgrims Wende
The pilgrims then idginantly
made their epically significant
odyssey by bike to another crea
ture that dwelt in a cave nearby
and was called Dlanodcm.
Dlanodcm, a nicer animal that
knew the value of publicity and
the virtue of consideration, admit
ted the both of them into its hovel
and attempted to offer them sanc
tuary from the evil Xof and the
Krouemoh gremlins who had sent
“A frank and uninhibited
exposition of the onrush
of physical desire!"
—Bosley Crowthef. N. V. Times
“A truly adult Im story!
It is a beautiful film,
finely made!"
-Judith Crist. N. Y. Htrsld Tribuns
COMING
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 26
McDonald
out a silent hue and cry to re
capture their escaped prisoners.
Dlanodcm tried the best it
could to entertain its unexpected
visitors but all it had to offer
was a cinematic magician who
flaunted the title "Chamber of
Horrors.”
His legerdemain, as enthusias
tically as he tried, was only tried,
obvious and awkward — all of
which Dlanodcin’s aged sorcerer
was entirely unaware. All his ar
tificial thaumaturgy made the two
escaped pilgrims wend and wince
with heroic pity—but never awful
terror.
What "Chamber of Horrors”
tried to conjure up was a vision of
sadomasochistic paranoiac, psy
chotic lunatic (portrayed by Pat
rick O'Neal) who strangles his fi
ancee after discovering her chas
tity was not quite what might have
been called unblemished. He
seeks refuge in a chamber of
whores but is apprehended by
(Con linnet/ mi (’iii/e 9)
DAVE
CLARK
SENATOR-AT-LARGE
Try Something
Different Tonight!
A complete selection of
EUROPEAN SMOKED MEATS, IMPORTED CHEESES,
SPECIALTY BREADS, AND A GOURMET SHELF
EUROPEAN SAUSAGE
AND DELICATESSEN
Open
Mon.-Thurs.—10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Friday—10 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday—10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sunday—1 p.m.-6 p.m.
1936 Main
Springfield
Phone 747-8431
Homecoming—1966
Presents
NANCY WILSON
IN CONCERT
WITH
Bola Sete
SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 5
8:00—McArthur Court
Tickets-Combination Concert and Dance-$7.00 Couple
Concert Tickets-$2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3 50
Now on Sale at Student Union Main Desk, and
Mattox Pipe Shop
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