Page 12 Thursday, April 29,1982 Summer in the City "Coming through for you FOR ALL YOUR SUMMER SPORTS WEAR!! TENNIS WEAR RUNNING CLOTHES SWIM WEAR WARM-UP SUITS BAGS ATHLETIC SHOES LEOTARDS 2nd Level Centrum 435-5918 Hours m-F 10:00-9:00 Sat. 10:00-5:30 Sun. 12:00-5:00 City summer employment scarce Job Service spokesman says By Cindy Gardner Students looking for summer employment in Lincoln are faced with a difficult but not impossible task, a Ne braska Job Service spokesman said. "It doesn't look encouraging," Gene Landkamer, manager of the service's Lincoln office, said. "I don't really see much becoming available for students." Full time job opportunities are very limited and many of the available positions are being filled by people laid off from other work, Landkamer said. Part time and temporary work will be the students' best bets. Landkamer said students may have the best luck find ing part time jobs in the food service industry or in temporary supervisory positions. He also said corn detassl ing work is available on a temporary basis. Construction work is almost completely out of the picture for students this summer. Landkamer said that high interest rates have slowed the building industry down and made jobs scarce. The Lincoln office of the Nebraska Job Service expects to handle 2,000 applications from high school and college students this summer. Landkamer suggested that students try finding work in their home towns. Students will find better job opportunities off campus than they will on campus, Larry Apel, assistant director of scholarships and financial aid at UNLsaid. Apel said more students who hold on-campus jobs during the fall and spring semesters are opting to keep those jobs for the summer. "They are choosing to keep their jobs because they don't see as many options this summer," Apel said. Campus employers have been receiving a large number of applications for the jobs they do have open. The grounds crew had 10 summer openings and received 60 applications, Apel said. Campus food service positions for the summer are nearly all filled and Apel said most positions at the Ne braska Union will be filled by returning employees. Apel said, however, that there are some openings that he would encourage students to look into. "Sometimes students miss the obvious," Apel said. "They should look in the want ads, especially on Sunday, and check the job board at least every other day." The job bulletin board is located outside Administrat ion 113. Apel said the board lists on campus as well as off campus job opportunities. He said his office is receiving between three and five openings for off-campus employ ment each day. Apel said campus employers are not required to list openings with his office. Students should check with vari ous departments and watch bulletin boards in all campus buildings, he said. Students seeking summer employment on campus may receive assistance from Apel. Valerie Fisher, assistant dir ector of scholarships and financial aid also can assist stu dents seeking off-campus employment. The Scholarships and Financial Aid office is located Administration 113. SERVING LUNCH Monday -Saturday 1 1 :30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. European & New York Specialties SERVING DINNER Friday and Saturday 5:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. International Cuisine. Light 'after theater' dishes after 9:00 p.m. Friday & Saturday FULL BAR SERVICE A Mm J J LOCATED IN THE OLD GLASS ONION 235 N. 11th St. 475-0414 p- ,,m , MA Dflve-ln Hours fTlon.-Ffi. 7:30 - 6:00 Sat. 8:30-Noon Downtown Bank 16th V P Entertainment activities slated By Leslie Boellstorff Although the Community Playhouse isn't planning any summer productions at this time and Pershing Auditorium has yet to announce its summer schedule, those people spending the summer in Lincoln should be able to keep themselves enter tained. Members of the Lincoln cultural com munity are planning a variety of activities for the summer. The Nebraska Repertory Theater, which is in its 14th year of pro fessional theater in Lincoln, is staging three productions over the summer, Temple Theater Manager Pat Overton said. Bedroom Farce, a play written in the 1970s by Alan Ayckbourn, opens June 24 at the Studio Theater in the Temple Build ing. Another Ayckbourn play , Absurd Per son Singular was previously staged by the Nebraska Repertory Theater. On July 8, ficnic opens in the Howell Theater. The play, written by William Ing, is set in the 1950s in Kansas. William llolden and Kim Novak starred in a well- known film version of the play. The Repertory Theater also is staging a musical, Little Mary Sunshine, a spoof of the old Nelson Eddy-Jeannette MacDonald musicals. Little Mary Sunshine was written by Rick Besoyan. The play opens July 15 at Howell Theater. Once the productions open, perfor mances alternate, so people interested in the plays should call the theater box office for the performance dates of each play, Overton said. There will be a total of 33 performances between June 24 and Aug. 14. All performances begin at 8 p.m. The Nebraska Repertory Theater and the UNL Opera Theater are joining in a production of Puccini's Madame Butterfly. Directed by Gregg Tallman and conducted by Robert Emile, the opera will feature kimono costumes designed, painted and dyed by Mary Byington. The opera is scheduled for July 1,3,9 and 1 1 . Season tickets for the three Nebraska Repertory Theater plays and Madame Butterfly will go on sale June 1 , for $18. Continued on Page 13 For all your photographic needs, check at Harman's first. O Cameras O FiSm O Photo Equipment O Accessories O Supplies Harman's 244 N. 13th 474-2402 Jim Harman Ralph L. Harman We have everything you need to make your summer pictures perfect. 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