The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 20, 1986, Image 14

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Junior
Senior
Advanced
Senior
EXPIRES 6-15 86
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10 DISCOUNT icc-t
WITH 24 HOUR M o
NOTICE. y "
Check around and get your best price,
then call Mike's Remember we vill
beat any total Keg
With or without cups and ice
Lincoln's No 1
KE DEALER
1?
IS
MODERN LANGUAGE FLOOR
Located in the Neihardt Residence Hall, Modern Language Floor
is a living-learning center where both language skills and a sense
of community are promoted.
DIRECTOR
The Director of Modern Language Floor works
under the Vice Chair of the Modern Languages and
Literature Department and the Complex Program
Director for Cather-Pound-Neihardt to further the
goals of both the floor and the program.
QUALIFICATION'S
Reasonable fluency in French, German or Spanish
Graduate student or advanced undergraduate
student in the Department of Modern Languages
and Literatures
Good interpersonal and communicat ion skills
Ability to design and promote group activities and
programs
Resident hall living experience (Helpful)
BENEFITS
Room (two room suite on the Modern Language
Floor) and board (approximately $2500 value) and
an opportunity for personal and professional develop
ment Please send letter of application, resume and a letter of recom
mendation by March 7, 1986 to:
ELLEN T. BAIRD, INTERIM CHAIR
DEPARTMENT OF MODERN LANGUAGES
AND LITERATURES
1111 OLDFATHER HALL (0315)
4r
Page 14
Colleve of
1
Hair Design
11th & M St. 474-4244
HAIRCUT STYLE
With With
Reg. Coupon Reg. Coupon
$3.25' $2.75 $5.50 $4.50
3.50 3.00 6.00 5.00
3.75 3.25 6.50 5.50
All work is performed by students undor thf suppr
vision of College of Hair Design Instructors
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'Sou our coupons in Paper Money.'
s3 -n "my
price in town
POSITION OPENING K
DIRECTOR $
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Peteena rises from 'underdog' life
PETEENA from Page 9
"I led a life of ridicule as a pup,"
I'etccna added. "I was always the
underdog. Those awful Barbies made
me so sad, I had to often go hide and
drown my sorrows in endless Milk Bone
hinges,"
SI rail said Peteena was so distraught
that she'decided to put her away in a
Barbie ease, so she could live a life of
seclusion. The down and out dog hid
herself from reality for 10 years, until
her owner "re-discovered" her in 1082
during the filming of "Dinosaur
Crunch."
The film was an in-depth study of a
surrealist new-wave band that was
more into taking mushrooms than play
ing Instruments.
Strait said she was looking for some
one to star in the flick. ?he noticed her
old Barbie case sitting on a table, so
she opened it. Peteena sat in the case,
her wistful eyes squinting at the blind
ing light of day.
"I decided to cast her and she stole
the show," Strait said. "I didn't realize
her potential until that day...she was
hot...a natural with a prodigious talent."
Strait then casted Peteena in pro
jects for her broadcasting classes. She
cast Peteena in her most lurid role ever
in "News in the Art," a parody of a
Daily Nebraskan
community programming assignment
for a videography class. The film was
about an avant-garde artist, played by
Steven Freis, whose works were so
offensive that people would boat him
up over them.
Peteena played a doggy dominatrix
in the artist's great est work, a sculp
lure titled, "Lesbian Barbies in Bon
dage!" In the piece, Peteena stood over
a multitude of tied up Barbies and
raised her right paw in a "fascist
salute."
Strait said the project got a good
grade, but the class and the teacher
"freaked out" over it.
"Everyone was totally shocked,"
Strait said. "They all wanted to know
who that dog was."
Strait said although her Peteena
films are deemed bizarre by the staid
standards of her broadcasting classes,
she has enjoyed the infamy they've
created for herself and her furry friend.
Films starring a poodle doll may
seem like mere nonsense, but Strait
said that her Peteena vehicles have
actually helped her sharpen her tech
nical film production skills.
Once Strait graduates, she plans to
pack up Peteena and her acquired
skills and head for the Big Apple, where
she'll attend graduate school at New
York University and major in independ
4.
5
J u- Cvd look
-! didn't think Id ook
With our hundreos o
your free sunglasses
Offer expires Marcn o,
wea r contacts,
A
Bast Park Pto
Lincoln, 466-1924
(Open Sunday)
3923 South 48th Street,
Lincoln 488-3106
The Atrium,
Lincoln 476-9652
ent film production.
Pet eena said she would like to set tie
down once she and her manager make
it, but she doesn't want to marry and
have a litter of pups for quite awhile.
"That would be murder to both my
career (turf my figure," she explained.
Student works on
new UNL play
MARCY from Page13
She said she would like to work in a
larger city, such as Chicago, Seat tie, or
San Francisco, but doesn't really want
to go to New York.
"New York scares me," she said,
"but it is Broadway, you can't deny
that." She said she has friends in Los
Angeles who could help her get work in
television.
"If I can work just acting, that's
what I want to do," she said, but she
does like young children and could go
back to teaching. For now she plans to
finish her M.F.A. and would like to
work with the Nebraska Repertory
Theatre.
Marcy is currently working on "The
Servant of Two Masters," which will be
performed at the University Theatre,
March 6 through 15.
-"Tf H
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good in glasses'.'
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Thursday, February 20, 1986