Daily fQebraskan Classifieds may be placed in Room 34 Nebraska Union between 9:00 AM and 5:00 PM daily weekdays. Cost for one ad is $.08 per word ($.80 minimum) for one insertion. Call 472-2590 for more information, or use the above form and bring it into the office. No refunds. No complimentary ads unless the error is brought to our attention within the firsi business day after publication. FOR SALE X-mas Sale: Will print any design or letters on t-shlrtt or weatshlrts--$2.50each. NATIONAL EMBLEM. 10th & Q. Antique wire rims. Large selection. $2-5. Call 435-7632. Panosonic stereo components. 1 mo. old. Excellent shape. Will back up factory guarantee for remainder of warranty period. See and hear at 1 110 S. 13th. 100 watt FM Multi-Plex stereo, changer, speakers, 8 -track. 466-9433. Two free kittens. Call 466-9209. Refrigerator and T.V. in good condition. Call 475-5026. Ask for Richard. Stereo components. Brand Names, guaranteed. Will undersell any dealer in Lincoln. Cal) 489-5233, Mon. thru Thurs. 6-9 p.m. Kodax X-90 Instamatic Camera. Abel 502 or Schramm 606. Want to sell 1 2' x 60' Centry Mobil Home, Skirted. Hal steel storage shed. Call 432-5736 after 5:00. Bach trumpet. Good condition. $250. 434-4443. 16" black and white TV. $50 or best offer. 434-4443. 1967 Chevy Impala. 283, 3-speed, Hurst. Absolutely perfect. 475-4347. '59 Ford. No. safety sticker, snow tires, or great looks. OIL HOG. Why would you want it. Good brakes, mill, traney and 16 m.p.g. on highway. Good for transportation, $60 or best offer. 477-4794 after 5:00 p.m. Ki tens--free to good home. 477-9911. '68 Olds 442 excellent condition. Vinyl-top, air, power, Mallory Distributor and coil (new), fits Olds engines. Contact Dennis Ogle 488-2331. INTERNATIONAL JOBS-Europe, South America, Asia, Australia, U.S.A. Openings in all ; fields-Social Scien-q$, Business, Sciences, - Engineering, Education, etc. Alaska construction and pipeline work. Earnings to $500 weekly. Summer or permanent. Paid expenses, bonuses, travel. Complete current information-only $3.00. Money back guarantee. Apply early for best opportunities-write now I I I International Employment, Box 721-N64, Peabody, Massachusetts 01960 (Not an employment agency). Beer Steins Mugs Mugs Mugs. Cliffs Smoke Shop. 12th & O St. MATINEE SPECIAL at THE SNOOKER BOWL!! Bowl two games ($1.00 & $.10 for shoes) and play one 18 hole round of miniature golf free, 1 6p.m. Open 1 p.m. midnight. UMHE-333 North 14th Sunday KhOOa.m. Community Moot; Program 3 10:30 a.m An introduction to the life and style of UMHE, an in formal gathering in which we stimulate, support, and enjoy each other; dress casually. "'I'M FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1971 j ' jl 1 uaiiiis fl L MtiMkial ROOMMATE WANTED Reliable girl 20 or over to share apt. with 3 other girls. Available now. 432-6401. Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. $37.50mo. 434-5548. PERSONAL Is John Bray coming? Happy Birthday C.C. This is your day-live it up. Love to Joe Blow, and you, of course. Yours always, Clim. SERVICES Watch Repair. Ail makes-including Timex. Campus Bookstore-East side, Look for yellow door. Pregnant? Who cares? We dol Call Birthright. 477-8021. LOST Lost yellow-gold round wire rim glasses. Reward. Call 475-6391. HELP WANTED 15 hours per week secretarial helper, male or female, at $1.70, forArts Council. Should type, have interest in the arts. Call Nelson Potter at 472-2428 435-7530. STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES Responsible students to represent tour operator for Orange Bowl Student Tour. Start immediately! Call, Big Eight Travel 432-0333. OFFICE HELP Student to work in office of tour operator. Part-time between classes okay. Start immediately. Call Big Eight Travel 432-0333. Part-time auditor, 3 days a week. 1 1 p.m. -7 a.m. No experience necessary. Apply in person, Clayton House Motel. MISCELLANEOUS BRIDE AND GROOM WANTED. If you're going to be married in late Jan., let us foot the bill. We need a bride and groom to be married at a public ceremony. For details write Bride, P.O. Box 80209, Lincoln, NB. 68501. Send checks for ROZMAN LEGAL FUND to: E. Pearlstein, 632 Eastborough Lane. Vacancies available for 2nd semester at co-ed Cornhusker co-opt 705 N. 23rd. Call 475-6796. Ask for an officer for. information. BE IN A CLASS BY YOURSELF during the INTERIM SESSION. Enroll now In Independent study by Correspondence and complete a course between semesters. 145 credit courses 48th & Dudley Methodist Student Chapel 640 No. 16th 9:30 Worship 10:30 11:30 4722580 472-2509 472-2590 available through 38 departments. Call or visit the University Extension Division, 611 Nebraska Hall, 472-2171. Ask for a free catalog. European Nomads MOST ECONOMICAL way to Europe summer '72. Write European Odyssey, Wlnsted, Minn. 65395. VETERAN'S FRIDAY AFTERNOON CLUB AT MYRON'S. 4-6 P.M. 15th 8i P-BETHER. CASH PAID for past season APBA cards. State condition, price. R. Burgdahl Box 1263 Gretna, La. 70053. BOJV CCDtRQsl tomorrow's fraternity today . . Pi Kappa Phi Mow Selecting Men For A New Fraternity register now nebraska union Sheldon Art Special Films 3,7,9 P.M. $1.00 Campus Bookstore open till 9:00 I THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Symphonies . . . Continued from page 8. dance bands, theater pits and night clubs was a steadier source of income. In Los Angeles, for example, the Philharmonic's day off was established on Monday-so the orchestra members could moonlight on the Lux Radio Theater. "When I started with the orchestra in 1931 the base bay was $3 1 a week and the season was much shorter," says Richard Kelley of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. "It's only been in the last three or four years that a musician has been able to live off nothing but his salary." THE LOW PAY also meant a generally lower quality of musicianship and a far smaller talent pool. "When I first auditioned for Klemperer," says clarinetist. Kalman Bloch, another Philharmonic veteran, "I called him up, then went to his house, played one or two selections and that was it. Today there are ads in the papers and 40 good people show up for one opening." But considering the skills and long training, symphony musicians are still underpaid. For one thing, the salaries are rarely year-around. As a rule, musicians get paid only during the orchestra's season. "Still, there are lots worse jobs to have," says Lloyd Gowen, a piccolo player with the San Francisco Symphony. factory trained) mechanic 475-9703 M VW majorminor ( V! Gallery Tues. Dec. 7th Thurs & Fridays "We do resent the fact that we all studied many years to develop our skills and that many times a carpenter outearns us. But we supplement our salaries with teaching. I'm not rich, but I'm not unhappy and my wife doesn't have to work." The strength and the willingness of the musicians' unions to strike has also increased the self-confidence of the average orchestra member. He is even developing a new attitude toward that still-towering figure, the conductor, IT HAS NEVER been easy for a new conductor to step in and dominate an orchestra but now he has to be very good, indeed, to get the job done. "Some of them step over conductors," says one well-known music director. "A lot of us would like to send our worst enemy to conduct the New York Philharmonic." The new pride of the musician is best exemplified in the words of Gordon Staples, concertmaster of the Detroit Symphony. "Conducting is about the only activity in the music business where a faker can get by," he says. "And remember, there's' no sound coming out of a baton and I've yet to hear a sonata written for one." I iVWoT OAS ii OLSTON'S 66 free wheel balanc ing with purchase of any VW snow tire. 27th & Orchard PAGE 11