Get chicken feed for scratch on Mondays. Chicken Basket w/salad bar $4.65 All Imports $1.25 Corona • Bass Ale • Heineken 11:00 A.M.-1:00 A.M. Kith and Q Street I Lower leeel of the (hinny v Huiiilmyi Lincoln. NK 08 >,* & < mm "v ' Dance event shows linkage in arts By Erno Sybert Stall Reporter Rhythm, line, color, symbolism, texture, space and mood came to gether in an intermarriage of art at Cross Connections, a celebration and exploration of the arts. Dancers, artists and musicians came together at the Sheldon Memo rial Art Gallery on Sunday to show and explain how the various forms of art were interrelated. The hour long event began at 1 p.m. “Dancers and musicians and art ists arc all concerned with line and form and space and color and tex ture,” said Kit Vorhees, coordinator of the event. She said the purpose of the event was to show how artists of all types work v> ith the same basic ingredients to make a finished project. Those who participated in Cross Connections were divided into three groups of about 30 people. Each group was assigned to a sepa rate gallery where participants saw a dance performance which was in spired by the visual arts displayed in the gallery. In two of the perform ances, music was used to lurthcr in spire the movements of the dancers. All of the dancers were dance majors at the University of Nebraska-Lin coln. After viewing the performance, participants were encouraged to ask questions and make comments about what they had seen and heard and felt. Then the group would move to an other gallery to view a different per formance. In this way,all participants were able to view each of the three performances. In the first gallery were paintings by Keith Jacobshagen. These paint ings portrayed a vast Nebraska sky looming over country roads. These paintings were the inspiration foi “Landscapes,” a composition by Randy Snyder. At the opening ol the piece, an image of a blue sky is implanted in the mindol the listener. The composition is a progression of weather patterns, and by the end of the composition, black storm clouds dominate the once sunny sky. Heather Hetrick, senior dance major, and Diane Zomcs, junior dance major, improvised while the tranquil music played. Zorncs swirled twirled and moved in circular, flowing movements which seemed to imitate a cool breeze. “I was think ing of the open winds," she said. In contrast, mcltick oascu mi improvisation on the vastness of the skies and country roads which seemed to stretch for miles across the horizon. Her movements were more angular than Zorncs’. Hetrick reached out and stretched her limbs upward and outward to an unknown destination. "I tried to visualize in my mind the roads,’ she said. Hetrick said that she tried to combine the inood ol the sky and the structure of the roads. The theme of the performances in the second gallery was spirituality. Three dance pieces were performed by Melissa Mapes-Raasch, senior dance major, and Deb Butcher and Phil Record, junior dance majors. T he dances were inspired b\ sev eral sculptures and paintings which had the common theme of spiritual ity. They provided the dancers with an opport un i l> to e x pre ss t he re I a li on - vhip between mind, body and soul through dance. The first two dance pieces seemed uv be filled wall introspection and soul searching, but it was the third dance piece which really demon strated the interaction of mind and body. The three dancers intertwined and gracefully placed themselves in intri cate positions requiring balance and concentration. Mapcs-Raasch. Butcher and Record not only exer cised their bodies, but exercised their minds as well. The three seemed to become a sculpture themselves. The third gallery used rhythm created by the participants, as well as paintings and sculpture, to inspire the dancers. Assorted instruments were made available for the participants who played them as the dancers per formed. Among tlie instruments were a tambourine, sand blocks, maracas, drums, bells, horns and a triangle. Junior dance majors Tracy Houser and Donna Schieffer posed in imita tion of the sculptures in die gallery and performed a piece inspired by three paintings with a theme of lone liness. The dancers began to dance in iheir own separate planes, moving lethargically and writhing on ihc floor. They gradually moved closer together until they shared the same plane, but even then, the two moved as if they were unaware of the other’s existence. Houser and Schicffcr also moved in a snake-like manner in imitation of “Snakeon Arch," a moving sculpture by Alexander Calder. Participants used their instruments to produce accompanying creaks and rattles. Cross Connections -.hewed most clcarlx through active!) involving the participants how the arts interrelate through their use of the same basic principles. Allowing participants to create their ow n music enabled them to experienc e the intermarriage of the arts first hand. ranwtT' b7j-« v i *n at mi k' a«i»]i*/*i^inBiiiH| j A102 Intro, to The Short Story When Carla told me that my date was a little short, I tl night she was talking dollars and cents, not feet and inches. So there I w as at the door, in mv sniked heels, staring at the top of mv date s head. All I could think was, how do i get mvself out of this? I could imagine i how my legs would ache if I had to w alk 1 around w ith my knees bent all evening. ■ So to stall for time, while figuring j S out how to fake malaria, I made us H some Double Dutch Chocolate. jM When I brought it into the living B I X room, I discovered that Cary w as n \ \ a chocolate lover too. Ahh, a man II f after my own heart. Okay; I de ll aded I'd give him a chance. So we S £ sat down and saw each other face- Bj V to-face for the first time. He had a nice smile. After some sma I talk—I mean conversation—I disc<)' ered that we both lov e Updike, hate the vv inter f j weather, and both have minia ture schnauzers. So, we made a date to introduce Shadow and Schatzi next week. Reader will be ripped-off CUFF Irom Page 12 Alter that, the chapter is littered w ith anachronisms, Moby Dick jokes and an understandable loathing for Charles Dickens. Between the book condensations are caricatures of famous people and their books. For instance, Richard Pryor reads “Fircstarter,” referring to his alleged drug accident while free basing cocaine several years ago. Or there’s the cartoon of subway vig ilante Bernard Goel/ reading “Sho gun." The main problem with these car toons is that they won’t last the test of time. The characters arc not labeled, so in 10 years, no one will know what to make of the funny little guy reading a historical novel. The authors review Hemingway s “The Old Man and the Sea,” in a bumbling manner, then proceed to shoot spitwads at George Orwell’s “Animal Farm.” Gina and Annette Casconc try very hard to be funny, and almost succeed, while recounting the conversion of the farm animals to communism to the tune of “Old McDonald.” But the story is just too long to fit into the lyrical scheme without boring the reader to tears. The Cascones acknowledge that and quit to tell the rest of the story in prose. “Mice and Men,” “Pygmalion, “The Grapes of Wrath” and countless “classics”of literature arc parodied in a merciful, quick blur. Even the au thors poop out. The only entry under "War and Peace” was: “There was a war and cight-hundrcd-sixly gazillion pages later, there was peace.” Luckily, the reader only has to slog through 85 pages of muck and mire to reach the end of this poorly written piece of hogslop. At the very end, the authors try to rally with their vciy own essay on Dr. Scuss’s “One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish.” “If you can’t dazzle ‘cm with bril liance, baffle ‘cm with bull-,” they authors adv isc. Gina and Annette Casconc follow their advice, result ing in a rip-off ;md a disappointment for the reader. General Foods’1 International Coffees. Share the feeling. i* . w 4!' Ic>8<» (»cikr