The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 14, 1975, Page page 12, Image 12

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    entertainment
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A Rumdinger is 10 natural,
tropical flavors, the lightest,
brightest Puerto Rican rum and
the best way to make your day
some-ding special. In 8 oz. bottles
or the party size fifth.
Humdinger. Hie new way to drink.
Made with ruin and natural flavors, by Calvert Dist. Co., Phila., Pa. 25 Proof.
For TV basketball relief
fry theater .music, comedy
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These Chicago Dudes want you
to meet a very nice "Lady"!!
Festival Rock Concert
extra guest stars
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State Basketball Tournament Special
TOMORROW IIITE! at 8 PU
Purchase tickets in advance $4.00 at Dirt Cheap
records. Student Union, Ben Simons Down
town, Gateway; Omaha Westroads, Miller &
Paine Downtown - Gateway. Daisy Lincoln
Omaha. Homers Old Town Plaza. Auditorium
Boxoffice
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ETV Festival 75 concludes in a weeic mai
starts off with basketball. . .and basketball. . .and
more basketball. Aunt Hannah recommends:
Saturday:
Turn on any station from noon till night and
you'll probably find a basketball game. NBC
plans to air at least 3 NCAA tournament games;
Ch. 10 will broadcast all four state championship
games and Ch. 3 plans to air Iowa girls
tournament actions.
For a change of pace, Ch. 12 offers the only
hope: 7 p.m.: Music Special Yuri Krasnapolsky
directs the Omaha Symphony Orchestra in this
special youth concert. Performance includes
works by Grieg, Stravinsky and Rossini.
Ch. 12, 8 p.m.: Profile in Music: Beverly Sills.
Well known soprano Sills talks about her life and
career and sings various opera arias.
Sunday:
Ch. 3, 1 p.m.: Bright Eyes, (movie, 1934).
Shirley Temple dances on in one of her earlier
vehicles in which she sings "The Good Ship
Lollipop." Need we ask for more?
Ch. 12, 2:30 p.m.: Theater in America:
Forget-Me-Not-Lane. Joseph Maher and
Geraldine Fitzgerald are featured in this Peter
Nichols drama, a reflective, nostalgic look at the
'40s through the eyes of a middle-aged man.
Ch. 12, 6:30 p.m.: Nova. Scientists discuss
whether there is any nonprimative alternative to
the modern industrial and machine age.
Ch. 12, 7:30 p.m.: Masterpiece Jheatre. Part
3 of the Vienna 1900 series.
Ch. 7, 7:30 p.m.: What's New Pussycat?
(movie, 1965). All lot of things have faded from
this once controversial comedy but it features
early Woody Allen material plus Peter Sellers
Peter O'Toole, Paula Prentiss and Ursula Andress
to boot.
Ch. 3, 10:30 p.m.: The Quiet Man (movie,
1952). One of John Ford's greatest non-western
movies (he won a directing Oscar for it). A rustic,
Irish comedy featuring the quintessinal Ford cast
John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, Barry
Fitzgerald and Victor McLaglen. The climax is
one of the biggest, brawling, fight scenes ever
filmed.
Ch. 12, 1:30 p.m.: Euhie Blake. . . .As long
As You Live. The 92 year old ragtime great
performs and reminisces.
Monday:
Ch. 7, 3 p.m.: Harvey (movie, 1950).
Delightful little film with Jimmy Stewart as
Elwood P. Dowd and his friend, a huge, invisible
rabbit. Stewart has made a comeback on the
stage recently with this same ptey.
Ch. 12, 7 p.m.: Henry Fonda as Clarence
Darrow. Fonda's incredible one-man-show in this
TV adaptation of his Broadway interpretation of
life of the great lawyer.
TV Aunt Hannah
Tuesday:
Ch. 12, 8 p.m.: Lincoln Symphony Concert.
Two hour, live broadcast of the Lincoln
Symphony under the direction of Leo Kopp.
Performances will include works from Verdi and
Tchaikovsky.
Wednesday:
Ch. 3, 7 p.m.: Hall of Fame Special: The
'Small Miracle. Touching story of a young boy
and his donkey, (sounds familiar) featuring the
acting of the late Italian director, Vittorio de
Sica.
Thursday:
Ch. 6 & 10, 9 p.m.: CBS New Special: A Tale
of Two Irelands. Documentary of the corrtinuing
Irish strife that has resulted in over 1200
c&sunli tics
Ch. 7, 10:30 p.m.: Wide World Special Film
producer Stanley Kramer hosts this
out-of-the-ordinary program in which famous
comic talents show a more serious side of their
abilities. Sid Ceasar gives us Captain Queeg from
The Caine Mutiny; Buddy Hacket plays Cyrano
de Bergerac; and Jonathan Winters does Willy
Loman from Death of a Salesman.
Friday:
Ch. 12, 7 p.m.: Straight, Part 11. The second
of this local group's TV concerts.
Ch. 4 (cable), 9 p.m.: ABC News Closeup:
IRS, A Question of Power. Report on some of
the apparent faults in the nation's revenue service
reveals that the IRS may need more auditing
than the taxpayers.
RbAD WANT ADS
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D.W. Griffith 1015 Masterpiece
With BIRTH OF A NATION, the Motion
Picture Industry was bom; by any standard
it remains one of the most important films
of all time. Griffith was so impressed with
Thomas Dixon's THE CLANSMAN that he
poured a then unheard of amount of money
($110,000) and energy (9 weeks shooting
time) into the project The film became a
huge critical success, and changed the course
of film art forever.
Film critic James Agee said ". . . (the
film) is equal to Brady's photographs,
Lincolns speeches, Whitman ' poems, .it is
equal, in fact, to the best work that has been
done in this country. And among moving
pictures it is the one great epic, tragic film."
"Like History written in Lightning'
President Woodrow Wilson
THRILLINGLY
CRAZY..RICH
WITH LAUGHTER,
A CLASSY
LIKELY TO BE WITH
US FOR years;
I 1 f'f' " V-
LIGHTER. fffei l
COMEDY A I i
BE WITH M h"&$
LOS ANGELES TIMES
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;KJ1
Saturday 8:30
Onion College Student Center
rhit off Prescott at ESth
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Daily at
1:30, 3:30,
5:30, 7:30,
9:30
FREE
AFTER
ay 3:00
6 P.FJ
page 12
daily nebraskan
friday, march 14, 1975