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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1984)
Daily Nebraskan Thursday, March 15, 1934 (i All You Caen Eai! Page 10 Smorgasbord Sunday Enjoy your choice of these sandwich favorites: o Roast Beef o Ham & Swiss o Ham, Salami & Cheese . only kJo 1 EVERY SUNDAY OPEjN TO CLOSE AT: n r-n jV i 1 O 13th &"0" O 27th &T O 48th & Normal O 48th & Cornhusker American Films presents J The new police recruits. Call them slobs. Call them jerks. Call them gross. Just don't call tljiem T when you're in trouble. I $ Jf$$& CT-r; iTV. .1-, --V rw. f' t.w vjs-- f J J ) LL0i I'M.?.!-' v- ( i . A(PAyi?iir?'i7 t'"V; ... WV What an Institution! "POLICE ACADEMY" a PAUL MASLANSKY production starring STEVE GUTTENffiHG"S"EM CATTPLL BUBBA SMITH and GEORGE GAYKES as comdt, lassard story by NEAL ISRAEL & PAT PROFT screenplay by KEAL ISRAEL PAT PROFT and HUGH WILSON .. . produced by PAUL MASLANSKY directed by HUGH WILSON 0ueoMNviA O. FRIDAY, MARCH 16 -3:00 pm SHELDON ART GALLERY FREE ADMISSION! Ladd Company Release First 40 people get free T-shirts! TVilsfwIolofl Tis the season when a young man or woman's fancy turns to award shows. The People's Choice Awards ceremony will be televised 8 p.m. tonight on Channeb 6 and 10. The final program in KUCVs Phi ladelphia Orchestra scries will be broad cast at 8 p.m. Riccardo Muti will con duct Pieces include Berlioz's The Death . of Cleopatra" and Bruckner's "Sym- j phony No. 4 in E flat." KUCVs fre quency is 00.9 FM. .. . At tis Chidden Parts five and six of Berlin Alex anderplatz will be screened at 7 and 9:15 p.m. in the Film Theatre. Admis sion is $3. At the IlimbU The faculty composers at UNL's School ofMusic will present an eclectic program of music at 8 p.m. A complete rundown of the concert appears else where on this page. On Campus Masochistic cinemaphiles rejoice! UPCs Sight and Sound Committee will present The Golden Turkey Film Festival, featuring three of the biggest duds ever made tonight beginning at 7 p.m. in the Great Plains Room of the East Union. Tonight's turkeys are Tlie Terror of Tiny Town, a western boast ing an all-midget cast; Reefer Madness, a psuedo-documentary exploiting the perils of the devil's weed; and Dis order in the Court, featuring those laugh meisters themselves, The Three Stooges. There u no admission, but you pay to get out. If you can stay for the whole thing, the exit fee will be waived. A two-day symposium sponsored by the Center For Great Plains Studies will look at European Influences on the Visual Arts of the Great Plains beginning today. Programs today include a look at the influence of the Dussel dorf Academy on American Art (10:30 a.m.), the influence of Romantic art (1:30 p.m.) and Western Artists and Illustrators (3:45 p.m.). The programs will be in the Rostrum of the Nebraska Union. ' Around Tovm The LeRoi Brothers have been swinging through Lincoln for the past two or three years. Now they have signed a contract with Columbia Records and will soon release their first rocka billy album for the labeL Theyll be at the Zoo, 136 N. 14th St, tonight and Friday. The cover tcrJht h $3. Patoots Saloon, 03 P St, will present Bad Comedy NiIit, featuring some of Lincoln's most unusual per formers. The bar hopes to make this a weekly event. The fun gets underway at 10 p.m., with no cover charge. Streets, which features former Kansas kingpin Steve Walsh, will be appearing at the Royal Grove, 340 W. Cornhusker Highway. The cover charge is $8.50 at the door. An interview with Walsh appears on Page 10. Ol ' Blue Eyes coming to town Frank Sinatra will appear in concert 8 p.m. April 19 in the Bob Devaney Sports Center, Bill Buntain of the Uni versity Program Council announced Wednesday. Buddy Rich, the jazz drummer, will open the show. The concert will be per formed in the round. Ticket prices are $20, $15 and $10. UNL students may purchase the $10 seats for $7.50 with student ID at the Nebraska Union. Other ticket outlets are all Brandeis and Pickles stores. Tickets go on sale Monday. Sinatra tickets may also be purchas ed by phone using Visa or Mastercard. There is a $1 charge for this service. The number is 472-2184. Mail orders will also be accepted by sending a self-addressed stamped en velope along with a money order or cashiers' chrck to Frank Sinatra, co UPC, 220 NebraslcaJJnlon, Lincoln, Neb., 68588. Mail order tickets will be assessed an additional dollar. There is a 10-ticket limit per person. Faculty composers deliver omething new and different By Kelly A. Ellsnwocd Are your ears, ready for some music that's crea tive, original and com pletely different? If so, the UNL School ofMusic Faculty Composers Con cert tonight may be worth a listen. The concert is scheduled for 8 p.m. in Kimball Rec ital Hall, and features the works of faculty compos ers Robert Beadell. Ran dall Snyder and William Ballenger. Three of the t ' , " ' 1 1 : rrr ! - - t ' A ' - 4 :KS10gP f r J "cufiUTY P2nrar.:.inr:cEM U ICQ CZih performances are pre mieres, and two pieces on the program are winners of national and interna tional composition com petitions. Also included on the recital are two "third stream" pieces util izing jazz characteristics, and excerpts from an opera. Perhaps the most un usual firet-ever-performed work on the program, and the one employing the most musical forces is Randall Snyder's The Kraken,"'The Kraken" is a setting of an early poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson, which describes a slumbering sea mons ter and hints of the Apo calypse in the New Tes tament's Book of John. " The piece is programmatic, which means the music expresses the images and ideas conjured in the poe try. The Kraken" will fea ture the University Cho rale, the UNL Flute Choir, narrator Donnallarler and organist Blair Titze. Jubb2iarmon,mc22o soprand and Lori Jenson, piano, will perform another Snyder premier, The Dan ces," a setting of the poe try of Sylvia Piath. The other premier per formance on the program is "Essays". a piece for brass ensemble by new faculty member William Ballenger. In addition to the Bal lenger pices, theUNLBrass Ensemble will perform Ro bert BeadelTs award-winning "Introduction and Al legro," which employs third stream jzzz techniques. Snyder's "Concerto for Cal vert," being performed by the Calvert Street Trio, is also an example of this genre. Snyder's"G3yphs,which features Glenn Guiles on oboe and bassoonist Gary Echols, is the other award winning composition in the concert. Three arias and a duet fromThe Number of Fools," an opera by Robert Bea dell, will be sung by Lor raine Beadell, Tracy Jor dan and Kris Olson and accompanied by Marj Mc Kinty.Tlieoperapremiered inlOCG and first performed at UNL in 1976. Snyder said this con cert is unusually varied, ranging from the very lyric and tonal music found in the opera scenes, to the aurally stimulating and atonal "Glyphs," to the jazz oriented "Concerto for Calvert" and "Intro duction and Allegro." "It would be a tremen dous thrill to hear a whole style of music and har mony that you have never heard before," Snyder said. He encouraged the cur ious to attend the free concert.