Music Friday, November 6 Ths Renegade Samis (Bohemian Boogie Grind) at the E ijju Beer Garden Homecoming Concert *i« teature 4 ol the School of Music s top ensembles UO Bealt Concert Hall, 8pm The Arn&ld Brothers (Moloern Vocal Duo) al Good Times 9 3(pm Monti Amundson (Blislering Blues) al Taylor's 9 30pm Drunk al Abis/Flophouse (Hock) al .John Henry's JOpm Skankin Pickle/ The Hairy Mamas (Ska Funk. Heggae. flap) al the WOW Hal 9 30pm Saturday, November 7 Bourne and MacLeod (Celle F oik Hock) at Good Times 8pm Monti Amundson (BKslertng Blues) al T aykws 9 30pm Jolly MorVTao Jones/Rotor (Al Hock) al John Henry's 10pm Peter MlmmeltnarVShona Lang (Hock) al the WOW Hall 8 30pm Sunday, November 8 Con Brio Inaugural Concert A new faculty chamber ensemble (Ml gkre its inaugural concert In DO Beal Concert Hall 4pm Monday, November 9 The Jesus L Hard!John Spencer Blues Explosion (Al Rock) al the WOW Hal 8 30pm Rooster's Blues Jam at Good T Unas 9 30pm John Fohl (Acoustic) al John Henry's 10pm Tuesday, November 10 Jait Combo* Concert*. 4 |tai contios w* per form Iradllonal and new arrangements by UrSversfy students UO Beal Concert Hal 8pm The Dreamer*/ The Loel Creek Gang (Hock) at John Henry* 10pm The Poet** (Acoustic.) at Good Times 9 30pm Local Hero (Acoustic) at Taylors 9 30pm Wednesday, November 11 Oregon Composer's Forum Concert. New music by Ursversty composition students UO Beal Concert Hal. 8pm Hene Corbin (Folk) el Defcert * 8 30pm Mo'Oreena (Blues) at Good Turns 9 30pm T rase ban SchooVTh* Undertaker* (A* Hock) at John Henry* 10pm Mark AiarVJIm Landry (Acoustic) at Taytors 930pm Thursday, November 12 The St range r»/T he Renegade Saint* (FolcRock) at Good Times 9 30pm MuHIple Sarcasm (A* Rock) at Taylors 9 30pm Hon Lappert S Roots H*n»g«de* a) John Henry's 10pm Visual Arts The Museum ol Natural History e»r*Ms -Death and Fiesta Day at lh* Dead m Oaxaca. Mealco' trwu Dec 23 Noon • 5 pm. Wed • Sun 1680 E ISth A v* The LaVem* Krause RatroepecUv* shows Oct 2S • Jan 3 al the UO Museum ot Art 1430 Johnson Lana LaVem* Kraus* Oakery has a group eihM fea turing overslrs photographic prints and compos!* Images ot amaler prints by 10 students Nov 9 • 13 wlh recaption 7-9 p m Nov 9 at lh* gallery located in Lawrence Hal. 1190 Franfckn Btvd Miscellaneous Stuart Shut men performs dramatic poWcal sallr* at Club WOW. m the basemen ot lh* WON Han. 8th and Lincoln. Tuesday. Nov 10. 7 30 ■ 10 pm. Si arkmaslon A Sene* ot Wonder, a play baaed on the He and works ol Hachael Carson , lh* patron saint ot lh* envronmenlal move men.' n presented by OSF»«G m the Cat* Audaortum (Agate Hall at 18lh and Agate) on Sunday. Nov 8. at 7 30 pm DanceJaml I* a drug and alcohol-ire* place lo gal a workout lor lh* body, mind and aplrtl Wednesdays. 7 30-10pm m Cal* Audlorkim Equus dramatizes logic, passion By Ming Rodrigues Emerald Contributor There are plays lhat |ust tell a story and then there are plays that have more than just a slurs to tell Eqims. Peter Shaffer's powerful drama that explores the human condition, fits the latter hill Winner of the.l'KS Tuny '.ward fur Best Play, Equus is a searing examina tion of the nature of existence But more than that, it taps into the concepts of rit ual a pathway to knowledge that is inaccessible through "normal'' process es, said director lack Watson, associate professor of theater arts "This play is not a detective store nor a study of deviant behavior, it is a ritual in which the constraints which we have built into our existence are made painfully evident." he said "It is a ritual that hopefully opens a pathway to growth." For most societies, rituals are a way of establishing order, and they provide a sense of community in which transfor mation can occur. Watson said. "Yet 1 Find myself in a society in which rituals are approached with a sense of forebod ing and mistrust. “This loss of ritual concerns me deeply because I believe that without rit ual we lose track of essential questions and become focused on an apparently rational world." he said. This focus sees the world as ai. imper sonal thing. Watson added, or something defined by numbers and measurements and governed by formulas and written law. "In such a society, something essen tial is stripped away from human behav ior; ! believe that ritual and theater are both means of restoring what is lost." he said. The plot pits the intellect of a psychia trist against the passions of a young man. who. for unknown reasons, blinded six horses. Equus dramatizes the human struggle to walk the fine line between logic and passion and to find a position between what’s normal and crazy.” Watson said The play's "theatricality" in tackling uourtMy Rhatt Luadka (Nuggatt) mnd Mlchaal Rymn McClutkay (Alan Strang) In tha Thaatra Dapt ‘a production of Equua, opanlng tonight. complex issues proved exciting not only to him, but to the rest of the cast and crew as well. Watson said. The production involved heavy stu dent participation. The set. lighting, cos tumes and even the music score were handled hy students Equus premiered at London's Old Vic Theatre in 1**73 where it enjoyed a long run. The following year, the play debuted on Broadway and ran for over a thousand performances, winning the Outer Critics' Award, the New York Drama Critics' Award and the Los Angeles Drama Critics Award Author Peter Shaffer has other plays to his credit including Mack Comedy. Amadeus, and Lettuce and Lovagp. Equus opens the University Theatre Muinstage Season tonight in Robinson Theatre in Villard Hall. 1100 Old Campus Lane Additional performances are scheduled for Nov 7, 12-14 ami 10 21 All performances begin at fl p m. Tickets, at $4.50 for students and senior citizens and $H general admission, are available at the University Theatre Uix office in Villard Hall. Taking in the Latest Sett Warner Book* $40 9V 126 pogM T«xt by Madonna Fholograph* by Steven Mattel Trust mo on this ono: Sex ain't that groat. Or maybo’wt; just did it wrong. We are mere week* into the hype, hoopla and hormonal rush surrounding Madonna's firsf publishing venture and I've just heard that you’re supposed to thumb through the book, studying the photos and text, while the CD plays (a special remix of the single "Erotica" is included.) Atmosphere, see? We went through the book. CD-less, a group of friends gathered around a Guido’s tabli^ ripping off the mylar, pawing pages, ooing and aahing. cooing and cringing, mysteriously pulling waiters from their lunch-rush sections. Now. weeks later. I'm sure that we did it wrong Unfortunately, now, weeks later, after several slower, closer examinations Review by D. Lee Williams (even with the CD on) Sex just doesn't seem any better. What's left of Sex. after sifting through all the mega-hype? Not much. Anything but afterglow. The problem is that Sex is really two projects: a book of grainy, wannabe art photographs, and a book of cheesy, wannabe erotic letters Both the photos and the text go in different directions, and. as is often the case when mixing disciplines, coherency is forfeited The first letter, for example, penned by "Dita"— the author's fantasy-sex alter ego — although explicit and fairly eroti cally-charged. really has nothing to do with the pierced and tattooed women Madonna poses with in Sex's first 10 photos And further in. more interesting shots go unexplained Madonna paired with a (grand)father figure; Madonna paired with a mirror. Madonna paired with a cocker spaniel (written elabora tion would really be helpful here); Madonna menage-a-triojs'd with model Naomi Campbell and rapper Big Daddy Kano. Dita doesn't dictate these diver sions. The shots, then, seem meant more for shock value than erotic appeal. Too bad for the mixed-up. hodge podge style because the text alone could have been hot. Together. Dita's letters to Turn to'SEX. Page 8A