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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1974)
m3 Talking, singing skaters up to same 'es-Capades' Hold on to your muffs and mittens, winter kid3f because the all-talking, a!l-singing, all-skating Ice Capades is coming back to its traditional Lincoln home, Pershing Municipal Auditorium. Long a favorite with Lincoln audiences, this crowd-pleasing extravaganza (a division of the Interstellar Ice Conspiracy) combines sparkling cos tumes, sugaestive sets, swishing, sweeping choreogra phy, and remarkably well-balanced humans skating in difficult, nay, impossible positions, all without the aid' of gyroscopes, servo-motors or their parents bamboo fishing poles! :.oj lib IffliI lOfEIBER 974 r" GIRLS-Gef your guyi while they last! Dance to STEELE AVENUE from 9:00 to 12:00 p.m. at EAST UNION for only $1.00 per person Vote for your favorite SADIE and ABNER Candidates Sponsored by East Union Dances and Concort Committee Sx 7- i THEUNDERSEA WORLD OF JHeQUES eOUSTEAU' - . The East Campus Uruon's Ldiicitinn Committee in conjun- jS ' - with the City Union's tales and Topics Committee are pre- sentmg a series of films arid a p enontrit ,ti ry Mr. Tom Norton 10:00 A.M. East Union 4:00 P.M. Nebraska Union Lower Auditorium MONDAY NOVEMBER II 'The Tragedy oi the Red Salmon After four months at sea, Captain Cousteau and his team of film makers, divers and scientists have vividly captured the complete spawning process of the red salmon in the Arctic. TUESDAY NOVEMBER 12 In the never - before filmed sequence of the Jacques Cousteau special, "Lagoon of Lost Ships", we plunge downward to 50 sunken Japanese riaval vessels iinKppri and untouched by man for a quarter of a century. WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 13 Cverv Sorina. aiant Pacific walruses migrate north to the Artie. m" i I IP Swimming and hitching rides on ice floes, thousands of them funnel II iKl through the ocean corridor between Alaska and Siberia. Captain 17 - 1 Cousteau and scientists photograph this arnaing migration and witness Eskimos at their hunt. THURSDAY NOVEMBER 14 Tiie Liisinkable Sea Otter The lively and vivacious sea otter, once considered extinct but now making and amazing reappearance on the coast of California, i3 once again in danger of extinction, and once again the danger is man. THURSDAY NOVEMBER 14 EAST CAMPUS UNION ACTIVITIES BUILDING 7:00 P-M- TOM HORTON "BEHIND THE SCENES LOOK hT THE WORLD OF JACQUES eOUSTEAU" Lagoon of Lost Ships' i ne Smiie dovid wore Featuring for the first time, former Swedish figure skating champion and smashing blonde Ann-Margaret Frei, this year's production promises to be a standout in an already illustrious series of post-glacial productions. Some highlights of this year's show include: "Celebration", an evocation of the good old days in the good old south with its good old-time religion in the good old tent-meetings. Stained glass and pipe organ set the authentic rural tent-meeting tenor, while a shiny "Stairway, to Heaven" carries the happily chanting chosen people to their reward in the green pastures beyond the pearly gates. "Atlantis", features the tantalizing panorama of warriors and slave girls slogging through a foggy bog of dry ice to the eerie strains of a synthesizer. A lady Neptune splashes and mucks about in a clear plastic bubble, while the dynamic Rick Earhart performs a spectacular solo. "S'Wonderful", a return to the era of the Gershwins and Busby Berkley, features Miss Adele Boucher skating a tribute to the Gershwin brothers with Montaigne and Blake, & spiffy adagio team, highlighting the number. These acts and many, many more will be featured in the 1974 Ice Capades, which will perform at Pershing today through Nov. 17. Tickets are on sale at the Pershing Box Office and a sple-ndid time is guaranteed for all. Traffic' lays an egg Review by Meg Greene. Steve Winwood and his group, Traffic, have been riding their musical crest by playing what is loosely called free-floating jazz. But it was good free-floating jazz. After their live album "On the Road", which was an exercise in boredom, the group lay dormant for awhile. But lo and behold, Winwood and his on-again-off-again personnel have come out with a new album, "Where The Eagle Flies". All this musical mish-mash produces is a giant egg. Moving back and forth between p.seudo rock-soul and jazz, Traffic's movements are slow and dull. One is almost smothered by the string section. It's getting to be quite tiresome and depressing to see so many once innovative and taiented groups fall by the wayside. It has to happen at some point, but does everybody have to do it at once? J" roji m mm wvmwm mnmm U D U D special free concert: polish pianist ANDRZEJ f DUTKiEWICZ y Saturday, nov. 16 8 pm kimball recital hall f no admiion charge ft tickets: rm 113 muuc bldg page 12 daily nebraskan ' Wednesday, november13, 1974