The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 04, 1984, Page Page 13, Image 13

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    Daily Nebraskan
Pago 13
April 4, 1C34
may
go to stereo
Each SDrinc for the past two years
KLMS has brouht back a flash from the
past. Last spring it was Judy Converse,
who had tried out the big city of Min
neapolis for awhile and decided she
wanted to come back to Lincoln. This
JoAnne
Young
year it's meteorologist Tom Dunklee,
who left last fall to do consulting for a
company in Oregon, but returned to
Lincoln in January.
"Lincoln's Meteorologist," as he is
billed by the station, returned to town
to continue work on his doctorate in
meteorology at UNL and to open his
own weather consulting firm. Dunklee
said he will be preparing forecasts and
acting as a consultant for radio sta
tions across Nebraska, Kansas and
South Dakota, as well as for agricultu
ral businesses, nurseries, construction
companies and other private industry.
As a consultant to KLMS, Dunklee
goes to the station each morning to
prepare his forecast for the day and do
some live weather reports between 6
a.m. and 8 a.m. The rest of the day the
reports are taped or called in, unless
there is severe weather in the area. In
that case, Dunklee b at the station for
weather reports.
Dunklee said KLMS has sophisticat
ed weather equipment that includes
color radar, which is helpful in short
range forecasting, and National Weath
er Service maps, satellite pictures and
instruments for measuring current con
ditions in Lincoln.
As a special one-time-only consul
tant to the Daily Nebraskan, Dunklee
said we can expect warmer tempera
tures in July. (On top of being a meteo
rologist, he's a comedian.) Expect wet
and cool for the rest of the semester.
Is Lincoln on the verge of having a
stereo AM station? Lee Thomas of
KLMS seems to be casting a particu
larly alert gaze at the venture.
The station recently increased its
power from 1,000 to 5,000 watts and
spent about $500,000 on a new trans
mitter site, according to Thomas. They
did it with an eye toward going stereo,
with the capability of adding some
equipment to complete the system if
they decide to do it, he said.
Thomas said KLMS is waiting to see
which of four AM stereo systems will
become the preferred system for sta
tions to use. Thomas has a Sony Walk-
Tclcvisicn
Ready When You Are, Mr. DeMille, is
a British documentary on pioneer film
maker Cecil B. DeMille and his some
times maniacal method of making
movies. The show airs at 9 p.m. on
Channel 12.
Hadio
Garcia Navarro leads this week's
Chicago Symphony (8 p.m., KUCV, 90.9
FM) which highlights a performance of
Tchaikovsky's "Symphony No. 5 in E
Minor." Two additional works also will
be featured: the tone poem "Don Juan"
by Richard Strauss and Roy Harris'
Symphony No. 3."
At the Sheldon
A FilmVideo Showcase featuring
the works of animator Robert Breer
will be presented for the next three
days at the Film Theatre. Today's line
up features 14 of. Breer's short films.
Shows are at 1, 7 and 9 p.m. Admission
is $3. Breer will be in town to discuss
his films Thursday and Friday.
a
AND HIS BAND
RUSS KUNKEL JOE VITALE KENNY PASSARELLI
BARRY BURTON MARK HALLMAN MIKE HANNA
- A
1
TOUR OIF AMERICA
1984
BOB DEVANEY SPORTS CENTER
FRIDAY, APRIL 27th 8:00 PM .
Rccorvsd Scaio 013.50 u sn.fcu
Tickets on sale this Saturday at all Brandeis ticket centers all Pickles Records
ind both Nebraskan iininns. For more information or tickets by mail call 472-5252.
man with AM stereo which picks up all
four systems by use of a switch. Buick
is putting some stereo am receivers m
their cars that pick up one system
the Delco system. Many stations are
waiting on stereo conversion to see
which of the systems emerges as the
clear favorite.
In the meantime, the audience per
ception of AM stereo could stand a
little work. According to Thomas, re
search KLMS has done shows the pub
lic has a "fuzzy notion" that AM stereo
amounts to "two little transistor
radios side-by-side " and that's how it
Spinal Tap...
would sound. But Thomas says that's
just not so. On his receiver, he said, AM
sounds as good as FM.
The receivers shouldn't be any more
expensive than stereo as they are now,
he said. The chip that converts the
receiver to stereo costs about $1.25.
Currently, KFAB in Omaha is stereo,
and Lincolnites can pick up WLS in
Chicago at night, which also broad
casts in stereo. For now, KLMS has the
money budgeted to convert to stereo,
Thomas said, and could start the con
'version on a moment's notice, when,
and if, that moment is right.
Continued from Page 12
It is the genius of its
creators, namely comed
ians Rob Reiner and Mich
ael McKean, which allow
the band to very accu
rately parody the last 20
years of high-energy rock
and roll
Taken on a superficial
level, This is Spinal Tap
could be discarded as the
work of a band which
doesn't quite have what
it takes to make it big in
the heavy metal arena.
That was not the album's
intent. It was meant to
poke fun at the self-glorifying
demigods of com
mercial rock and rolL
If you like heavy metal
music, you may not after
listening to this album; it
contains every trite, bor
ing musical device avail
able to express savage
desires and cravings in a
very crude manner.
If you enjoy good satire,
but not especially heavy
metal, This is Spinal Tap
could bring a smile, with
it's view of heavy metal as
the culmination of the
overblown charade of
rock music. Spinal Tap is
not such a far-out hyber
bole that its satire is mis
sed; most of the time it is
right on target.
BILLY JOEL TICKETS
11th Row Center
Best Offer, 475-9743
Sigma Martin 6-strlng guitar. Anniver
sary Special. Whardshell case. 476-3065.
Two Billy Joel tickets, excellent seats.
Call 472-S947 or 472-9943.
Two BILLY JOEL concert tickets) Best
offer, 476-3864476-6721.
Realistic SCT-11 Cassette Deck. $125
or best offer. 467-4296 or 472-1654 days.
ARE YOU
4 bad Joel tickets. $5 each. 435-0675.
Honda Express, only 2100 miles, excel
lent shape. $225 or offer. 474-5731.
Yamaha receiver 40wCh. Mint Condi
tion, $200. Call 472-0114.
MOVING, MUST SELL - Two 25
Color Console TV's, chest, dressers, end
and coffee tables, all kinds of lamps, 3
kitchen tables without chairs, nice dou
ble bed, older greyblack hide-a-bad.
466-6252.
AND TACKY?
WELL, CrC?3 pictures v.'znts you to win
A Ccntsmpcrsry end University PrcSrm Council PrtstntsS.on
i-i, i ., r illy :P&V,L
" c ' ' ''lite "ryyy'X ' jO si- t;' fel3C'?y: ., ff'w
, . -y : . im:y M-i --mMmKr?
v.
Get set to get wet.,
J
- "UP THE CREEK" OPENS APRIL AT THEATERS EVERYWHERE
All you need to do is have your favorite club, organization, team, etc. sponsor
you as one of their representatives thafs really "UP THE CREEK." Each team of
four contestants will be judged on their costuming and appearance in four
categories: the raunchiest, the zaniest, the most outrageous, and finally, how
tacky they can be!
1st PRIZE: A private screening for you and your friends of Orion's zany and out
rageous contemporary comedy, "UP THE CREEK"
2nd and 3rd PRIZES: Limited number of "UP THE CREEK" t-shirts, posters and
soundtrack albums. Soundtrack available on PashaCBS Records
So this is your big chance to prove that you really are "UP THE CREEK" and
tacky.
University of Nebraska
CONTEST WILL BE HELD AT- PP. PeiTS
nATF- April 5, 1934 timp- 9.00 pm
LOCATION: 322 South 9th St.
PRESENTED BY: P-O- Pears, Hitching Post & Wooden Rckd,
fder Hrji Ufa end Ths Hair Ernporium
I tCKeiS may ow auujcwi -