Photo Art Sale Sept. 21-25 Nebraska Union $2.00-$20.00 WATERBEDS complete $99 CAR STEREOS $29 TELEPHONES $7 SOUND WAVE 1700 West 0 St. 474-7695 Hrs: M-F 10-8 Set. 10-6 Sun. noon-5 in joy smooth, creamy Frozen Yogurt that tastes like Ice Cream but with 80% less fat! -FREE SAMPLES I Can’t Believe hs^ YOGURT! Frozen Vbgurt Stores OPEN: 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Daly Noon-11 p.m. SwMlayi 70th & Van Dorn, Mi. 489-9116 Holmes Lake Plaza, Lincoln S ijj Lincoln'* Ent*f1*inm«nl 0**1* £ Jthe cruzados! C 340 W. Comhusker Hwy. C .. M . We Crack Prices Wide Open! 17th & P-DOWNTOWN 237 S. 70th—ESQUIRE PLAZA 3814 Normal Blvd. This semester, give yourself a break. Now that you’re back hitting the books pushing the the Lincoln YMCA would like to give your body a break SAVE $35.00 on NEW MEMBERSHIPS Now thru Oct. 5th with monthly payments $14.00 $18.00 (without Nautilus) (with Nautilusj^^^B^^^ Downtown Branch You can swim, join aerobics, 1039-p street lift weights or play racquetball. ^^B — — - JUST 2 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS jH^IvlOA 11th & P Streets 475-9622. •Limited U*e, Student ID Required More oldies, goodies? OLD from Page 6 let them. The most interesting shows came during the last season (1968) when Frank Zappa (who for some bizarre reason look a shine to the Monkces) appeared in one episode dressed as Mike Nesmith. Nesmith dons a snarled black wig and goatee a la F.Z. and tells the psucdo-M ikey that his band is banal and insipid. Other later shows reveal our favorite help less puppets striving for some sort of progression (paisley shirts, beads, Dolenz sporting an afro), but look closely and Nesmith’s obvious con tempt for the entire proceedings stil 1 is quite evident. The trademark of the program: a flurry of jokes and wise cracks (some good, mostly bad) in a blatant aping of “A Hard Day’s Night.” Theme song: 2. “I Spy,” weeknights, 2 a.m., ch. 16. The first real prime-time TV show to star a black man (Nat King Cole failed in the 1950s when he couldn’t maintain sponsors) and one of the more witty and intelligent secret agcnt/action shows of the lime. Robert Culp and B i II Cosby are a great team, and the show eschews the usual cardboard sets for filming at exotic locations around the world. A couple of shows that dealt with civil rights were downright militant for prime time TV in the ’60s. Bitchin’ theme song, too. “My Favorite Martian,” weeknights, 12:30 a.m., ch. 9. Like many sitcoms, the entire show relics on the fatuous premise. This time it’s a Martian landing on earth and gelling some bland earthling into all sorts of hilarious predicaments. Awfully predictable, but reliable character actor Ray Walston (as said Martian) rescues this from total mind lessness. A harmless burn of 30 min utes during your late-night Pop Tart. “The Mickey Rooney Show,” weeknights, 12:30 a.m., ch. 15. Mickey Rooney plays a 33-ycar old kid (he still lives at home with Ma and Pa) who is an usher at a local TV network. Another turbulent chapter in ihc career ol America s lavoriie ex ploited kid star. A curious program ming choice at CBN since “The Mickey Rooney Show” ran only one year and there are probably only about 40 or 50 episodes. Worst of all, it’s painfully unfunny and, justified or not, is included in the book “The Worst TV Shows of All Time.” “The Rifleman,” Sundays, 9:30 a.m., ch. 9. Western TV shows should only be a half-hour long. Don't pad out an hour of valuable viewing time with * horses, ranch hands with bad hygiene doing shots o’ redeye, or horses. If I was that enamored with the critters, I’d be squandering my dough at the race track. Hence, we got a nice, compact little western show. Lucas McCain (Chuck Conners) is widowed and rais ing his son, Mark, all by himself. He’s a big, sensitive guy who’s also pretty dam pious and handy with an auto matic rifle. Bad guys taunt him. He doesn’t want to kill ‘cm, but he has to. Like Billy Jack and Palladin, all he was say in’ was give peace through violence a chance! Great fast-paced direction by Joseph Lewis. The very first episode of “The Rifleman” fea tures a young Dennis Hopper.