The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 06, 1974, Page page 12, Image 12
J w i , J' " -WW OPEHIIUG DECEM BER 11 iiiiiiimwiiiiiiiiH i iiiiiiiimiiiiinMwiiiiiMW I enlert foment . j 1''?." H -fl - "X, y Of Qtr In the Rariiscon Cornhusker Hotel . Presents The Hilarious Broadway Comedy By tM-r. - ' Neil 1.1- ' - - i- t COME BLGw your mm& t f r UK il If I Beginning 6:30 p.m. Curt" MS 00 S6 95 wmk nigha $7.95 Frl, tStt. Dotes: Ore. it, 11, 13. . .18, S. 30.. .3730. Jan. 11975) 1,3,3.4 .. .. 9,10,11. .. IS, IS, 17. 16. .,71. 33.14.X... ..... .... f ..... n. w ft TC"yJr 54 30 . Jf A f.V I f jSpecral Student Prices $6.50 week nights $7.50 Fri. & Sat. For B0srvatfona Call 474-1371 f If eL.r-sX V--; HOLLYWOOD and VINE 12th & QUE - 2nd LEVEL GLASS MENAGERIE PHONE 475-6626 YOU'VE BEEN READING ABOUT THE Bl-SEXUAL CHIC PHENOMENON "Radley Metzger nil anously hits the bulls eye of Bi-sexual chic -a guaranteed . turn on for any audience. TT&', .... . . .......... jr ftr v "Matzgar nas oircia nia i r - vy movla with his mUturs f 1 of atyllah alan and f tongu-ln-chk J" Bnitrfl Drew A Man and and a Woman and a Man and a Man and a Woman etc., eft. St 7 V J "111 now - ron TMt r AT WORK AND PLAY IH RAOUlVMlTZOKR't ? CH.f VitlufCWin Culv(l.rnn ljfyC.ria GrntCf ''iw .Audubon ilm RcliMQplftCoior it should have been a love story! h, QBUSTERaiul BILLIE COLUMBIA PiCTURESA DIVISION OF COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES INC. Park free after 6:00 either Rampark or Autopark. Jean-Francois Millet will be one of the artists featured In the "Romantic versus Classic Art" series this weekend. French artists are film subjects Showing at the Sheldon Film Theater this weekend is the sixth installment of Lord Kenneth Clark's most recent series, "Romantic versus Classic Art." This week's subjects are two French arfTSttT ci0r?' Delacroix and "Jean Francois Millet. Bastard of the great statesman Talleyrand, Delacroix displayed the elegance and arrogance of a born aristocrat, affecting a dandyish turn of dress. Unlike fellow romantic William Turner, Delacroix war. an avowed intellectual. The range and depth of his mind, asserts Clark, made it difficult for him to be a painter since he could not, in the manner of anti-intellectual Turner, abandon himself to his perceptions. Delacroix was the eptome of the frenzied, reveling side of the romantic movement, and many of his canvases hold scenes of .indescribable carnage and ferociiy, tigers and lions in plain view as symbols of his own boundless vitality. Of all the artists in this series, Clark holds Millet as being possibly the hardest of the lot to place into a category. His subjects were intensely romantic, but his treatment of the human figure was distinctly classic in its "derivation. His unique.a&rntyiQ fuse the best of these two schools faulted in the creation of images both popular and enduring. Millet's early works consist of deft pastiches of Correggio and Fragonard, curious in the light of his later fame coming from his paintings of peasants. However, his early work highlights the sensuality that Millet suppressed after his having heard a remark concerning it. Clark proposes that this disavowal of sensuality and the nude form was dangerous to his art and points out in evidence manifestations of buried er oticism in later works. The films will be shown in the Sheldon Film Theater Saturday at 1 ;30 p.m. and Sunday at 3:00 p.m. They are open to tfie public and there Js no admission charge. ft9Biiff HsiP Rpfc flnca! I . in ui .k. A . " I i "' 1 1 10 Q- 5 o I 1 1 1 I 1 o U iJ Get 3 pieces of finger-lickin good chicken, roll, potato, and cole slaw Colonel Sanders Kentucky Fried Chicken Bring in this coupon Good thru Dec. 31 only Four location's 2100 N. 48th So. 8 1 2th in Lincoln 48 & Van Dorn 71st & O o CL o I 1 I I E J tamps v mm ftm.m mm 1975 RED BOOKS are now in slock Coin Boards still just each I i c 49 AMR RMll M$SM ' page 12 dally nebraskan friday, december 6, 1974 4 ,