The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 05, 1976, Page page 2, Image 2

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    Friday, march 5, 1975
page 2
dally nebraskan
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By Bryant Brooks
Lincoln's Budweiser and Michelob taps could be
drying up by the end of next week if the nationwide
strike at the nine Anheuser-Busch Inc. breweries is
not settled soon. .
But Gene Bahm, manager of Lincoln's only Bud
distributor, L. M. KaJin Distributor Inc., said he
doubted the strike would cramp the style of any but
the most fervent Bud drinkers.
Bahm arrived at the Zoo Bar in his red Budweiser
ski coat Wednesday afternoon bringing the news to
the local taverns.
"We held off until 1 p.m. hoping they'd send us
some more beer," he said- "We're already sold out of
Mich keg beer. I'd imagine we've got about six or
eight days of Bud kegs left."
Bahm said there is about a month's supply of
, canned and bottled Budweiser and Michelob on hand
"if people don't start stockpiling." But a three-month
strike has been predicted by John Shiver, secretary of
Teamsters Local 388 in Tampa. Most' of the 8,000
workers on strike are Teamsters members and as of
Wednesday no negotiations had begun. '
Elections more important?
Neither the bartender nor the -half-dozen after
noon patrons, (none of whom were drinking Bud),
seemed bothered.
"Bud ain't the only beer around," the bartender
said.
"Why don't you report on the elections or some- m
thing that's worthwhile?" a customer asked.
Bahm sat down on a corner stool and started
reminiscing about the "Schlitz strike of '56." Schlitz
was the number one seller in the nation then, accord
ing to Bahm, but during that strike, Budweiser took
over the top slot and has stayed there.
"It's not likely the same thing will happen to Bud
weiser because all the other breweries are already
running at full capacity," he said.
In tears
Shortly after Bahm left, Keith Landgren, a con
fessed "Bud-man," stopped in for a couple of drinks.
He was in St. Louis last weekend, and the strike
fouled his intentions of touring the brewery, said
Landgren, the director of transportation for the
Lancaster Office of Mental Retardation.
"For us Bud drinkers that place is a shrine," he
said and took a sip from the bottle of Bud in his
hand. "If you drink Bud you think about things like
that."
Landgren said, however, that coping with a Bud
weiser shortage would not be too difficult for him.
"You don't notice any difference after the first
two or three anyway because your tongue's coated,"
he said. "I drink Budweiser because of the horse."
The bartender, who did not want his name men
tioned because of "legal reasons", became curious.
"I remember when it was a man's army," the
bartender said. " . . a lot of hostilities. Eighty
five per cent of the guys over there were Bud drink
ers. It was hell. ... I'd be ashamed to be in the army
today."
"When the guy asks me what I want I tell him Bud
because I've got to tell him something," Landgren
said.
"Yeah, it was a hell of an army," the bartender
said. "Those guys would break down in tears if they
knew Bud was on strike."
My 1
f T f ' ' t
Photo by Ktvin Higky
There's a month's supply of Budweiser left at the
warehouse of L.M. Kalin Distributor, Inc. at 5901
Cornhusker Hwy.
short
ii
Special Lenten and Easter Services
are planned by five campus ministries
The University Studies
Historical Theatre will pre
sent the play The Boys in
the Band Sunday night in
the Centennial College
Commons Room at 8 p.m.
Tractor Club is meeting
. tonight at 5 in Burr Hall
101. There will be a game
picture presentation at the
meeting.
The UNL Chemistry
Dept. is sponsoring a lecture
today by Glen A. Russell
from the Chemistry Dept. at
Iowa State University at
3:30 p.m. in Hamilton Hall
1 10. An informal discussion
period with Russell begins
at 2 pjn. in Hamilton 801."
.
The Rho chapter of Phi
Chi Theta will have a
Founders Day Banquet
Saturday at 12:30 pjn. at
the Lincoln Hilton. The
banquet will honor the
Lincoln businesswoman of
the year, who was select
ed by the organization.
Refund checks for
students whose tuition
statements showed a credit 4
bolaiiCa bid Available ml the
cashier's window in the
Administration Bldg. from
8:30 ajn. to Noon and 1 to
4 pjn.
The Chet Ager Nature
Center at Pioneer Park will
present the films Rocks To
Take Home and Storms
Saturday and Sunday at
2:15 and 3:15 pjn.
.
The Gay Action Group's
weekly dance is Sunday
from 9 p.m. to midnight
at UMHE Commonplace,
333 N. 14th St. '
The Denver Audubon
Society and the University
of Northern ' Colorado are
sponsoring a seven-day
Grassland Institute June 13
through 20. The institute is
to let interested persons
participate in preservation
of grassland heritage.
Registration deadline is
April 15. For further
information, contact Jim
Wright, 1227 South Quincy
Way, Denver, Colo., 80231.
The International
Student Union will sponsor
an International Banquet
Sunday at 6:30 pjn. in the
Nebraska Union Ballroom.
The dinner will feature 12
international dishes. Tickets
are S4.25 and may be
obtained from International
Student Union members.
- Appuv&uGuS fwf
Innocents Society, senior
honorary, are available in
Union 200 and 332 and the
East Campus Activities
Bldg. main office. Any
junior may apply. Deadline
is March 16.
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By Dana Green
During the Lenten and Easter season, five campus
ministries will offer special services.
St. Marks on-the-Campus Episcopal Church, 1309 R
St., is scheduling additional services at 12:30 pjn. on
Wednesdays and an evening service at 7 on Thursdays.
Lenten Bible studies will be on Wednesdays at 1 1 :30 a.m.
and Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m.
St. Marks also will have a Palm Sunday Service April
1 1 at 10:30 ajn. During Holy Week, April 1 1 through 18,
there will be a 7:30 p.m. service on April 15, Maundy
Thursday, the celebration of the Last Supper, and a 7:30
p.m. Good Friday service April 16. A symbolic Easter vigil
on April 17 will start at 11:30 pjn. and last until 1 ajn.a
Easter morning. Easter service April 18 will start at 10:30
a.m.
About 75 to 100 students attend St. Marks, but
attendance usually increases during the Easter season, said
Father Ronald Wiley.
Wesley House, 640 N. 16th St., will have special
Lenten services on Wednesday evenings at 9. The Rev.
Duane Hutchinson said it will have a Tennebrae candle
service at 8 ajn. on Maudy Thursday.
Thirty hour fast
A 30-hour fast is planned for Palm Sunday weekend,
Hutchinson said. The fast begins at 6 a.m. April 10 and
lasts until noon Palm Sunday. The fast is to raise money
for the world's hungry people and participants will take
pledges'for each hour of their fast.
According to the Wesley House staff, about 200 stu
dents regularly attend Wesley House services and they said
they expect some increase during Easter.
. Hutchinson said there are no plans for Good Friday,
but there are two services Easter morning at 10 and 1 1
ajn.
The Rev. Ray Waetjen of the University Lutheran
Chapel. 510 Q St., said rnidweek Lenten services will be
on Wednesdays at 7 and 9:30 p.m. on March 10, 17, 31
and April 7.
During Holy Week, the chapel will have Wednesday and
Thursday services at 7 pjn., Waetjen said. Good Friday
services will be at 6:45 and 4:30 pjn. and Easter services
will be at 10:45 ajn. Waetjen said about 300 normally
attend the Lutheran Chapel, but added he wasn't sure if
me numoer sigruueanuy increases during the holy season.
Vesper dramas will be at 7 and 9:15 on Wednesday
nights during the Lenten season it the Lutheran Student
Chapel, 535 N. 16th., said intern Steve Rode. The title of
the vesper dramas are: March 10, One of You; March 17,
What Charge is Against Him?; March 31, A Way With Him;
and April 7, Into Your Hands.
Rode said the March 17 9:15 pjn. .esper drama and
service will be at Wesley House and added that no service
is planned for Wednesday, April 14.
Rode said the Maundy Thursday and Good Friday
services will start at 7 p.m. and 7 ajn. respectively. Dr.
Wesley Feurst will be guest speaker at the 9:30 and 11
ajn. services on Palm Sunday.
According to Rode, the Lutheran Student Chapel is
planning a combined sunrise service with Wesley House on
Easter morning, but plans have not been finalized.
The Catholic Newman Center, 320 N. 16th St., has
scheduled an additional Mass on Monday evenings at 10
during the Lenten season, and a special Easter Liturgy
Mass on April 14.
The Rev. Larry Doerr said there are no special plans
made for Easter at UMHE Commonplace, 333 N. 14 St.,
but said it is considering an overnight retreat the weekend
before Easter.
Black writer to speak
Alex Haley, black author of television documentaries
and books, will speak tonight In the Nebraska Union
Centennial Room at 8 pjn. The lecture is sponsored by
UNL's Black Student Coalition.
Haley, 54, has been an author for 17 years and lisu
among his a cheive merits The Autobiography of Makom X
and the Playboy Magazine Interview, which he originit-
Haley's latest effort entitled Roots is being filmed into
the longest television series ever made In the United
States, and will premiere on the ABC Television Network
September 1976.
Haley's lecture topic tonight will be entitled "A Saga
of Black History." There will be in informal rap session
with Haley at 4 p.m. in the Abel Hall North Lounge.
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