3 BAKED POTATOES ARE HERE! EUGENE! fltffEB iscauMmcusi .-Hambunjci ss^' 7em/£ - tTivrtt burgers omclcttv- ...anti more" $6wnstdirs df the Sth St Public MdrKt'f t^Debra Ehrman EUGENE CITY COUNClL -mRD 3 4 4 As a recent graduate of the U of O I am sensitive to University issues. I will he an advocate for students, facul ty. and staff. I will personally lobby at the legislature to secure our fair share of funding.’ ’ Paid Debra Khmiun lor t'M> Cimneil. Marilyn (Well. Treasurer. 764 Lawrence t\. liuyene UO Bookstore= • • • zmoff all ENDS SATURDAY GENER*L bO°ks 686-3510 # Limited to stock on hand UU Mon Fri ’S 5 30 * ^sh register 5a'f 0t"\ BOOKSTORE Sat. 10 00-3 00 * No 0,her discounts apply TINO'S SPAGHETTI HOUSE PIZZA 342-8111 TINO'S 1 • Full dinner menu • 23 varieties of Pizzas • Whole wheat and white crust • Pizzas to go -cooked and uncooked 15th and Willamette Hour*: Mon.-Thura 11 00-Midnight M. 11:00-1 00# m tat 5 00-1 00 a m tun. 5 00-11 00 p m Fife 6, Section ft Not just a 'woman's' play "Top Girls," this year's University Theatre Second Season swansong, could be dubiously tagged a "woman's play." The two-act play is writ ten by a woman, directed by a woman and acted by women. But to dismiss it as a feminist piece would both limit and in sult a production that appears to strive for a more universal appeal. The action focuses on Marlene (Kimberly Anderson), a contemporary woman who has just been promoted to an in fluential position in the employ ment agency, Top Girls. Employ ment agencies are in the business of selling people to the world of commerce, and Marlene is in the thick of it. Marlene must test her emo tional strength by balancing her "female" sensibilities against Four years in the making, a three part, four hour film masterpiece TIBET A BUDDHIST TRILOGY “An extraordinary lntam«nl. simple and very compelling.” Shall* Hanson I OS ANI.I11 S TIMl S "A clear mirror lamas Ir.ntlln HOS MIN (,1 OBI “Quietly powerful, an astonishing achievement CasH TIU I ONDON TIMl s ORIENT HI MS RELEASE BIJOU Sat.-Sun. May 12-13 2 p.m. ONLY Admn. $5.00 ($4.00 with student I.D.) Recycte this paper Recycle this paper what are traditionally perceived as male drives — ambition, power and success. The prices she pays are predictably exorbi tant, and the resulting crimes of the heart are poignant. Marlene is the prototypical modern woman plagued by the modern woman's disease: self-doubt. Top or not, she's still a girl. Though convincingly por trayed by Anderson, Marlene's dilemma is a hackneyed one. Fortunately, “Top Girls" is in triguing enough to transcend the familiar feminist line. In fact, the play is so full of characters, set changes and time warps that, ultimately, the cliched theme is overshadowed by an interesting and experimental production. British playwright Caryl Chur chill begins the first act with a dinner party that is attended by a handful of historical women who have struggled with power and position. The play then jumps back and forth in con temporary time. Structurally, for most of us who think in linear terms, this theatrical device can be confusing, especially when the same actresses play several different characters. The struc tural arrangement also requires patience; the last scene of the first act appears to have no rela tionship to the first scene — un til later. The play does, however, fall together neatly in the final scene. Even if the play is awkwardly conceived, it is well acted by a number of the women, all of whom play more than one role. Nancy Julian and Shannon O'Keefe give exceptional, in sightful performances. Their roles build the emotional substance of the play. Both ac tresses rarely miss a beat or crucial detail in their parts as Marlene's martyred sister, Joyce (Julian), and Joyce's slow, clum sy daughter (O'Keefe). Julian's Scotch-1 rish brogue that she delivers in her historical part as Isabella Bird was a genuine theatrical high point. The set, which was designed by the indefatigable Faber deChaine, is one of the more complex Arena Theatre designs. The set is radically changed several times, but most of the transitions are pulled off with grace by the cast members. Each piece moves smoothly on and off the stage. The most appeal ing set is the first scene's, in which Marlene meets with her historical guests. A long table dressed in a fuschia tablecloth and sparkling with crystal at the upscale Chez Femme Restaurant, recalls a kind of ironic Woman's Last Supper. Director Lynda Czajkowska is following in a Second Season tradition of working with new material that stands artistically to the left of UT's more mainstream Robinson Theatre presentations. Czajkowska could have directed a more stri dent production, thrashing out sins visited upon women from the beginning of time. Such an interpretation might have even been suitable to the Arena Theatre. The Arena audience, more so than the Robinson spectator, is better prepared for dramatic innovation obsessed with message. Instead Czajkowska, who also directed last year's "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground," chose wisely to vary the play's pace and capitalize on its humor and ironies. Women do jabber, do expose their hearts easily and do know the designs of martyr dom, "Top Girls" suggests. Without exploiting these "weaknesses," Czajkowska seems to have taken them seriously enough to laugh at them. The strength symbolized by these women — compassion, empathy and esprit de corps — are thus even more triumphant ly exposed. The play continues in the Arena Theatre May 11-12 and May 17-19. Admission is $2. Ticket information and reserva tions are available at the Box Of fice at 686-4191. Angela Allen Morgan jum. Food Service STUCK AT SCHOOL THIS WEEKEND! Weekend Special at the Fishbowl Deli: FREE Cup of Soup with the purchase of any Deli Sandwich! Don't Forget the Fishbowl is still a great place for soft drinks, coffee, pastries, yogurts and more! gel into nature, this paper ire, recycle A Friday, May 11, 1984