The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, June 09, 1975, Page page 10, Image 10

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Two Hours of Bowling V
and a Movie for $2.00!
AT THE ftSBRASECA UNIOfJ
' THURSDAY, JUNE 12
. " "Buster & Billie" '
JLMSJLSJJL9AXU.f VlAJLUMM f J .L
SHOWINGS AT 7:00 & 9:00
BOWLING AT 7:00 & 9:00
BOWLING & MOVIE - S2.00 MOVIE ONLY SI .00
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Summer film festival echos
American
Bicentennial theme
We can accommodate 40 bovlers and j
166 movie-viewers at each time! j
I TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE Sponsored by I
Bowling Desk, Nebr. Union Lower Level The Nebraska
and at the door- Union
Chances are that the name
Kcrczak Ziolkauski doesn't
ring a belt. '" ; -
Or how abut Gutzon
Borglum?
But these men are as
American as, well, apple pie.
For these men have spent
substantial parts of the
twentieth century carving
midwestern mountain
monuments. Ziolkowski has
worked on a tribute to the
American Indian, etched in the
Black Hills of South Dakota
while Borglum has worked
nearby at Mount Rushmore.
The story of these men, and
of others who have contributed
in large and small measure to
the American past will be
featured m the Bicentennial
Film Feshval sponsored by the
UN-L Instructional Media
Center through :he University
Extension Division.
The series will b held every
Wednesday from 1 1 :30 to 1 :30
p.m in the Nebraska Union
main lounge 'rom June 11 to
August 13.
Recognized by the
American Revolution
Bicentennial Commission of
Nebraska, the festival will
include the 13 chapters of the
Alistair Cooke film portrait,
America: -A Personal History of
the United States, co-produced
by the British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC) and
Time-Life Films.
Short feature films dealing
with bits of Americana and a
look at the film achievements
of American movie pioneers
like George Melies and D.W.
Griffith wiil round out the
seris.
The film schedule is:
June 11 .'
America: Making a Revolution
The Top "
Film Firsts: Part 1 and Part 2
June 25
-America: Inventing a Nation
Fun Factory
Omega
The Apple
July 2
America: Gone West
My Financial Career
The General
Norman Rockwell:
American Dream
An
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July 9
A Firebiil
America:
Night .
Joshua in the Box
America: Domsticatinf
Wilderness
in thn
America
Road to Yesterday
The Impact of
Ziolkouski and
Borglum
July 16
Money on the Land
Korczak
Gutzon
July 23
America: The Huddled Masses
Sad Clowns
Occurrence at Owl Creek
Bridge
July 30
America: The Promise Fulfilled
and the Promise Broken
' Home of the Brave -The
Legend of Sleepy Hollow
Slapstick "
August 6
America: The Arsenal
- The Sixties
Will Rogers
August 13
America: The First Impact.
American Time Capsule
America: The Ore Abundiin
Life
Old
pianos
need
tuner
The University of
Nebraska-Lincoln School of
Music is looking for a person tc
tuno about 29,400 piano
strings beginning this fall. .
This person will have to
regulate a $10,000 concert
grand piano and , retrieve
chewing-gum . wrappers from
the inside of countless others.
The person the School of
Music is looking for is a piano
technician, according to John
Moran, director, The
technician will be responsible
for the tuning, maintenance
and repair of the 125 upright
and grand pianos in the music
school.
The salary will be between
$10-15,000, depending on
experience and qualifications,
for 11 months of work per
year.' Moonlighting privately is
per mined at night and on '
weekends..
This is the first time the
School of Music it. seeking
full-time piano technician. In
the past, it relied on the
part-time service of local
technicians.
But many school pianos are
so old now, and in varying
condition, Moran said, that a
fiiirtirrss technician i neodc-d.
"We have been advertising!
for quite awhile, and we have
between 25 and 30 .
applications from all over the
country," Moran said.
Moran noted that one of the
problems a piano technician
faces working in a school of
satisfying the diverse desires of
a piano faculty-each will want
the same piano to sound a bit
differently.
A long-rangs goal is to set
up a shop where pianos can be
rebuilt. It is generally agreed,
said Moran, that an old rebuilt
piano, such as a Steinway,
dickering or Mason & Hamlin,
is superior to the pianos
manufactured today. "
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