The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 16, 1980, Page page 9, Image 9

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    Wednesday, april 16, 1980
daily nebraskan
pago9
Ballet
Continued from Page 8
The "tightrope" consisted of two male dancers and a
female. Prior to their appearance on stage a dancer came
on and drew an imaginary chalk line on the floor to re
present the tightrope. The dancers then walked on with
ludicrously arrogant struts, clutching parasols. The female
wore a tutu and rather limp plumes in her hair that made
her look like Pavlova after a ducking. The three dancers
walked tenuously back and forth, across the imaginary
line, doing splits and wavering as if to fall off.
At one time they picked up the girl and balanced her
on their shoulders with legs wobbling precariously. They
were immensely pleased with themsel es and were all set
for what they felt was their well-desuved applause when
a fourth dancer appeared and did effortless somersaults all
the way down the imaginary line. The first three dancers
left in a huff.
Comic break
This piece was a lovely comic interlude and you be
came so caught up in its humor that you didn't realize
the difficulties of performing it. To dance "sports is to
perform one type of movement demanding a certain
amount of tension and pressure with another type with
totally different standards.
The third piece of the evening was perhaps the least
successful. The work was "Adagic Hammerklavier,"
choreographed by Hans van Manen td Beethoven's
"Adagio of the Hammerklaviersonate Opus 106." The
initial impression of the piece was one of softness. The
blue flowing costumes for the women and white tights
for the men accented this. But for some reason the de
signer, Jean-Paul Vroam, saw fit to accent the men's white
tights with silver neck chains of the collar variety. This
gave a hard metallic glint that seemed out of place and cut
the smooth soft line of the male dressers off at the neck.
The work was probably the longest of the evening and
was an adagio. There is some question though of when
repetition is harmony and when it becomes monotonous.
The piece was lovely and abstract but the lack of variety
of movement and its length led to restlessness in the
audience and they were glad at its conclusion.
The audience thoroughly enjoyed the "Pas de Dix"
from the classic Petipa ballet "Raymonda." Raymondais
a ballet of saracens and damsels in distress set to the
moorish Hungarian strains of Alexander Glazounov's wild
ly passionate score. This was a "divertissment" with a
dash for the company to exhibit its fine virtuoso footwork.
Rangeland symposium
scheduled for Friday
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Tonight llfed., April 16
The UNL Range Manage
ment Club will be holding
its first annual rangeland
symposium on April, 18,
from 941:40 ajra. in the
East Campus Union.
According to club presi
dent Dan Duncan, four
speakers will be featured
and each will cover a topic
related to "Rangeland in the
80s,' theme for the sympos
ium. Scheduled first is a wel
come by T.E. Hartung,
dean of the College of Agri
culture, at 9 ajn. First
speaker will be E. Mickey
Stewart, director of the
State Department of Agri
culture from 9:10-9:40 am.
Second speaker will be
Hartung frorri 10-10:30 am.
Clenton Pat Reese, a district
extension specialist in range
rranagement from Scotts
biuff, will speak third from
10.-30-U ajm. Final speaker
for the symposium will be
Clenton Owensby, a pro
fessor in range science at
I I
Kansas State University.
The Range Movement
Club was formed last fall
and currently has 25 mem
bers. It is a student cliap
ter of the Nebraska Section,
Society for Range Management.
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