The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 18, 1967, Page Page 5, Image 5
Wednesday, October 18, 1967 The Daily Nebraskan Page 5 ' - . I M f-" TfPr r : . o v 'Vis 1 Ivf. 1 1 CM 1 I r,A "f' I The Other Half I CamPus CaleiuIar NEBRASKA SWEETHEART FINALISTS . . . (Front row. left to right): Julie Irish, Jeannie Howard, Jolcen Phillips, Jae Palmer, S&eryl Ehlers. (Back row): Ann Windle, Kitty McManus, Pam Wood, Nancy Coufal, Jeanne Fox. The NU Sweetheart will be announced at the Fall Kosmet Club production. - tr - -- iinn'ipTTt - . I j PRINCE KOSMET FINALISTS . . . (Front row, left to right): Bennett Gregory, Bob Peterson, Joel Swanson, Marvin Mueller, Adrian Fiala. (Back row): Sid Logemann, Bob Barlee. Lany Icenogle, Phil Bowen, Bob Schmucker. Prince Kosmet will be announced at the Fall Kosmet Club production. By BARB MARTIN Junior Staff Ticket sales for the two-hour concert to be presented by folksinger Joan Baez Nov. 15 at Pershing Auditorium will begin Oct. 24 at the Nebraska Union Program Of fice. Block sales for ten or more tickets will begin at 8 a.m. and general sales will begin at noon for the $2, $2.50 and $3 seats. The program is being sponsored by the Union Special Events Committee headed by Phil Bowen. Elder Art Gallery of Nebraska Wesleyan University is exhibiting a collection of Contemporary Japanese paintings from the Roland Gibson Art Foundation. The display includes forty works in various media by artists recognized as masters in their field, according to a representative of Sheldon Art Gallery. The exhibition will continue until Nov. 12. First in the series of programs being presented by the Lincoln Concert Association, Fiesta Mexicana, will be produced at Pershing Auditorium Oct. 24. The program includes the state dances of Mexico, which will be performed by thirty dancers in authentic costumes of brightly-colored materials and five-foot head dresses. A departmental recital will be presented by the music department at 3:30 p.m., Oct. 18 at the Sheldon Art Gal lery Auditorium. The public is invited to attend. Merrill Ellis, instructor of music at North Texas State University in Denton, Texas, will present his methods in the field of experimental electronic music at the open ing program of the Contemporary Symposium Series ini tiated by the department of music. Ellis is serving as head of a project to improve and expand an Electronic Music Laboratory for development and study of techniques of composing with electronic sound sources. Ellis will be on the University campus Oct. 19 to lectuVe students and present a concert featuring an ex perimental sound synthesizer at 8 p.m. in the choral room of the Westbrook Music Building. Nebraska Masquers are selling tickets at the Union for Falstaff, to be shown at the Stuart Theater, Oct. 26 and 27 at matinee and evening performances. The University of Nebraska Theatre will present its first production of the season. Misanthrope by Moliere, at Howell Theatre Oct. 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. The 17th century comedy will also be presented Nov. 10 and 11. Dec. 1 and 2, and Dec. 15 and 16. A Delicate Balance by award-winning playwright, Edward Albee will alternate performances with. Misanthrope to provide a comparison of past and present in the theater. Program II of the New. Cinema, co-sponsored by the Union FilmCommittee and Sheldon Art Gallery, will be shown at Sheldon Thursday and Friday. Performances are scheduled for 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Student tickets may be purchased at the door for $1. The New Cinema consists of a series of short films which have received almost every major award intended for this area of film production. Shorts included in the second part of the program are The Concert of M. Kabal (Borowczyk), All The Boys Are Caned Patrick (Godard), AI (Kuri), Act Without Words (Bettiol) Actua-Tilt (Herman), The Games of An gels (Borowczyk), The Apple (Dunning), The Most (Bal lentine and Sheppard) and Do-It-Yourself Cartoon Kit (Godfrey). The Nebraska Union Weekend film for Oct. 20 and 22 is A House Is Not A Home. The film will be shown at the Union Friday at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Students must present IDs to purchase a $.50. ticket. Sundays and Cybele, a French film, will be presented Wednesday as second in the series sponsored by the Union Foreign Film Committee. Hardy Kruer and Pa tricia Gozzi star under the direction of Serge Bourguig-non. WEDNESDAY (All activities are in the Nebraska Union, unless oth erwise indicated.) INTER VARSITY - 12. noon. UAAD 12 noon. SILENT VIGIL - Peti tions available 12 noon to 1 p.m. PLACEMENT OFFICE LUNCHEON-12:30 p.m. SOCIOLOGY 53-1:30 p.m. BUILDERS -College Days 3:30 p.m. PEOPLE TO PEOPLE Welcome to University of Nebraska Film 3:30 p.m. AWS House of Repre sentatives 3:30 p.m. AWS Workers Council 3:30 p.m. YWCA - Girls Club-3:30" p.m. YWCA - Head Start 3:30 p.m. YWCA Juvenile Court 3:30 p.m. BUILDERS Foundation Committee 3:30 p.m. ASUN Student Senate 4:00 p.m. EAST UNION RECREA TION COMMITTEE - 4 p.m.. East Union. TALENT FOR TEACH ING 4:30. Room 200 Teach ers College. QUIZ BOWL-4 :30 p.m. BUILDERS Campus Promotion 4:30 p.m. YWCA Tutorial Com mittee 4:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. ASUX-Model UN Com mittee 6:30 p.m. ASUN Electoral Com mission Homecoming Queen Interviews 6:30 p.m. RED CROSS-:30 p.m. PI TAU SIGMA-7 p.m. BUILDERS . Board - 7 p.m. TASSELS - Tryouts for Rally Contest 7 p.m. A QUAQUETTES Prac tice for Tryouts 7 p.m., Colisium Pool. ORCHESIS-7 p.m., Uni versity High School Gym. ECONOMICS AND BUSI NESS ROUND TABLE 7:30 p.m. CIRCLE K--7:30 p.m. ALPHA PHI OMEGA 7:30 p.m. MATH COUNSELORS 7:30 p.m. ASUN Library Com mittee 8 p.m. CORN COBS-Homecom-ing Display Chairmen Meet ing 9 p.m. East Union 'Beer' Sold By Builders Rolling out the barrel in the East Union 7:00 p.m. Wednesday will be the Build ers at their German Beer Barrel party. The hour party for stu dents in the East Campus Builders committees will feature the Lost Souls Com bo and a German beer gar den decor. Both freshmen and upper classmen interested in Build ers are encouraged to attend and to bring their beer steins. Union root beer will be served for a nickel. NU Cowboys Place In Sollegiate Rodeo High Class Entertainment Comes To Lincoln Concert Association has completed a r r a ngements for Ihe coming season. Ne gotiations were closed last week when Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, representative from the New York office of Co lumbia Artist Management, visited Lincoln. According to Mrs. Tay lor, veteran in the enter tainment field, the pro gram offered to Lincoln ites this year is an excel lent one. First of the series is Fi esta Mexicana, to be pre sented Oct. 24 at Pershing Auditorium. The Fiesta con sists of a company of 30 dancers, singers and mu sicians who will perform the state dances of Mexico featuring brightly-colored, authentic costumes. Metropolitan Opera so prano Gianna D'Angelo will also appear in Lincoln. Winners Announced In Contest Top winners of Sunday's Go Big Red Buffalo Hunt will be awarded four free 50-yard- line tickets to the Colorado game, four free meals at East Hills Country Club and four tickets to the Cooper Theatre. Dick Barnes' four-man team from Farmhouse col lected the required articles in the shortest time to take first place. Kathy Scott led team num ber ten to a second place victory. Each member will receive a free meal at the Black Coach Supper Club. Four free 1968 Cornhuskers wil be awarded to team nine. ho grabbed a third place under the leadership of Mar cia Fischer. Fifteen teams qualified for various prizes. An Entry fee of $1.50 per person was charged, and approximately $100 was collected. Proceeds will be contributed W the University Foundation Schol arship Fund. Miss D'Angelo has pre viously performed at the Chicago Lyric Opera, the San Francisco Opera and has toured Europe as well since her debut as "Gilda" in Rome. The New York Herald tribune says she is. "an American soprano of whom the entire country can be proud." Third in the Lincoln se ries will be the Romeros, a four-man guitar ensem ble who were the first group of their king to ap pear at Lincoln Center and Philharmonic Hall. Past performances in clude engagements with the the Dallas Symphony, the "Tonight" show and the New York Philharmonic. Performances by Cele donio Romero and his sons, Celin, Angel and Pepe have been heralded as. "A breathtaking display of so lo and ensemble guitar mu sic in the Romantic, Ba roque and Flamenco tradi tions." by the New York Times. The Indianapolis Sympho ny Orchestra directed by Izler Solomon will play for Lincoln audiences later in the season. The Symphony ranks third in the nation in number of tour engage ments ad was invited to participate in Carne gie Hall's International Festival of Visiting Orches tras. "Indiana produces an or chestra that has all the power, refinement, accur acy, elasticity of reaction, transparency of tone, and everything else that the fin est kind of orchestra can h a v e." wrote Winthrop Sargeant of The New York er. A fifth concert will be an nounced at a future date with the performance dates for the Romeros. Miss D'Angelo and the Sympho ny. According to Mrs. Tay lor, Midwesterners are re ceiving entertainers of qual ity equal to that of any area of the country. She said an artist on tour can not travel more than 250 miles without scheduling a performance. This indicates several Midwestern appear ances during each tour. The University Rodeo Club piled up 168 points last weekend to place fourth in a field of ten schools at a national intercollegiate rodeo held at Wisconsin State University in R i v e r Falls, Wisconsin. Points for Nebraska were contributed by Chip Whit taker with a third in steer wrestling and a fourth in ribbon roping. Bob Sennett took fourth in calf roping and Butch Terril placed fifth in bare-back riding. Whittaker's showing in steer wTestling moved him to first place in this event among competitors from the Great Plains district of the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association. The Great Plains district includes North Dakota, South Dakota, Kansas, Wisconsin and Iowa. This rodeo completed the club's fall schedule. Their next rodeo will be held at Kansas State, April 19 and 20. 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