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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1975)
tan "V SyEiimar Studiits 8:30 5:30 SAT. TILL NOON TEEL lisp. . .mm bkrlcit cootiom 7v;p " ' I IplMfer.l- 1 DRAWER I vv& J - - AR deal roHer bearing, smooth v side construction. Each draweA completely encased. Drawers rest one en top of the other and can be locked together to torn one sturdy unit. DemiMiMS IS" Wifc2?' tVefllli" Mgh Standara' legal Sif will accomodate Utter six. 2 DRAWER ............. ,...$13f5 3 DRAWER ...... ... ,..$20w 4 DRAWER ......... ..... $26'5 NEWLY REDUCED PRICES SR-11 . 39" C? 1A With SR-50 HS SR-51tt- ts 5 2550 ... ..... 49" 2500ll(Ky)39" Casio Mini Calculator 8 digit kay 19 Induces Carrying Co s ChargerInstruction lokl Yr. Warranty iEAVY DUTY STEEL DESKS -:v::v:-:-::v-:';:-:-:.:.y:r:::vr'WA-&... j - .. YOU TOPVAIUI,; AS IS, IIAUi'FIl at tho cornop of 11th & "0" 4 L i v. 477-7131 YOU ALWAYS DO (SETTER AT, J Shakespeare comedy Lwith-rig.usic is third repertory production By Vince Boucher Ail's well that ends well. V And if all's well with music, then so much the better, .light? Composer Lis' Lewis and director David Bell haye no qualms about adding newly-composed music to Shakespeare's comedy "All's Well that ends Well." The production, staged by the Nebraska 1975 Repertory Theatre, opens at Howell Theatre 'Friday. . " Other performance dates are July 19, 22, 24, 28, August 1, 5, 1 1, 14, 20, 25, 29 and Sept. 3, 4 and 6. All performances will begin at 8 p.m. 'Not untouchable' be hard to use music with because the lyrics are not Shakespeare. But Shakespeare is not untouchable," Lewis said. "Not everything he wrote was brilliant. The music works to support the play where he was weak and reinforce the concept of the play," she said. - Producer Bell added that there is retlly no traditional way to do Shakespeare. One classic performance of 'All's Well' staged by Tyrone Guthrie with Dame Edith Evans set the play in North Africa during World War II. Phy faithful Bell and Lewis' version of the play remains.. 1 "It could Shakespeare faithful to the original 18th Century setting of the play. "I'm really consciously trying to focus the show on a particular style, one of elegance that's hitting some kind of youthful impetuosity of a certain period of Louis XV," Bell said. Lewis said that while the music mixes several periods, she strove to make it sound light and reminiscent of the tonal images of the era such as recorder and harpsichord. "David has an incredible sense of style " she said, addjng that his demands of her music did not hamper her in composing. Collaborated twice before "I'm very happy with the way it turned out. When you're working on a piece of art that Wolves more than one person, it's so difficult for an artist with a concept and integrity to work with another artist with a concept and integrity," she said. Bell and Lewis have collaborated in plays twice before, first in the 1973 production of "The Comedy of Errors" at Howell and in "Cohen is a Grand Old Name"', also written by Bell, during last summer's repertory season. "Part of the reason the shows work so well is that the whole repertory group works well together-we're all friendly and each element has a lot of respect for the other element," Lewis said. mum Mm Award given to UN-L prof UN-L Chemistry Professor Cecil E. Vanderzee has been named winner of the Huffman Award of the U.S. Calorimetry Conference. He will be presented the award and will deliver the Huffman address at the annual conference to be held in Seattle, Wash., July 16-19. The award is presented in honor of Hugh Huffman, a founder of the Calorimetry Conference, who for many years was with the Bureau of Mines in Bartlesville, Okla. Dr. Vanderzee will discuss problems in the field of calorimetry, which is the study of energy released in chemical , reactions, in his lecture at the ' conference. He will also present another lecture and provide a paper for the conference. Dr. Vanderzee is also to provide the lead-off invited lecture at the Fourth International Conference on Thermodynamics to be held in Montpellier, France, Aug. 26-30. t ..... - aiii s mum I n Aden ml on $3 j'Swsofl MwnMnXlp (10 1 1 MW J , f city " ip NcMfct mpmnotf Thmtn 19 . . Kg&tLL THSATRI N. 5th K ItraMt .X Uiewlii. NC OWOe n - - Xj . I u, . .a superb solo guitar- artist from Minneppolis whose style of finger-picking astonishes even thdmost sophisticated guitar buffs." 'j Giiiiar Player Magazine Friday, Jiily I Iheldon' Sculpture- Gardeni hi case of rain ' Union Ballroom Sponsor by Nebraska Union Sc'jnaer Concerts paga 10 summer nebraskan monday, July 14, 1975 "