Arts & Entertainment Dave London and his wife, Linda, in the background, in their shop at 2639 N. 48th St. Lincoln shop gains reputation for repairs, custom-built instruments By Mark Lage Senior Reporter It was in 1967 that Dale Lon don, then a commercial electri-. cian, built a guitar for his wife. By 1969 the interest had so consumed him that he opened London Stringed Instrument Repair, lo cated in Lincoln at 2639 N.48lh St. “But sometimes I think I should be doing that (working as an electrician) again,” London said, “so I could make some money.” The shop, which London runs with his wife Linda, is known by musicians throughout the country for its custom instrument-making, and, especially, its repair work. “It’s the repair business that keeps us going/’ Linda said. “The custom building is justthe icing on the cake.” The shop does repairs for musi cians from all over the country, often receiving calls from either Denver or Des Moines, depending on which way bands happen to be I touring, London said. “They drop4 em off at our place at 3 a.m. sometimes,” London said. The only times when any musi cian receives priority from Lon don’s shop is when they only are going to be in Lincoln for a day and need the repairs quickly, London said. “We’ve had some big-timers in,’’ London said - Linda was able to recall Luther Ellison, and The Marshall Tucker Band — “but we don’t treat them any differently.” “We’ve had some big-timers in, but we don’t treat them any ditfer entiy.” -London M 4‘The reason is this: everybody deserves good work. We build the instrument the same for every body,” he said. “Even if I lose money, we don’t let a bad job out of here. A bad job is just like hand ing someone a piece of paper that says Tm dog doo-doo.’” “When you don’t do a lot of advertising,” Linda said, your best advertiser is a satisfied cus tomer.” She added that when a person meets musicians out of town and mentions Lincoln, they’ve heard of the Zoo Bar, 136 N. 14th St.,and they’ve heard good things about London Stringed In strument Repair. A great deal of time, study and effort has gone into making Lon don’s shop known for the quality of its work. “I’ve read just about every thing that’s been published on the subject,” London said. “I’ve read every Masters thesis on the violin that are written in English and German.” He also has visited most of the best instrument shops in the coun try, including, by their invitation, making an extended tour of the Gibson Factory. While there, he spent a day on its assembly line, and spent the rest of the time in its repair shop. London’s shop works on all stringed instruments, and even some that aren’t stringed, like giv ing assistance on pipe organs. “Whatever the hell there is to make a buck in,” London said. He said he has built mostly banjos and guitars, although he also has built violins, cellos, hammered dulci mers and mountain dulcimers. Since 1975, the Londons have See LONDON on 13 Art League revitalizes, seeks student members ~ t i j By Gretchen Boehr Senior Reporter _ The Art League at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln is trying to revi talize itself by recruiting underclass men, said President Reggi Jenkins. Last year the student art club was all but dead, Jenkins said, and no one came to the officer elections in spring. ‘‘The league was full of juniors, and seniors who were graduating,” said Jenkins, a junior art major. ‘‘Freshmen and sophomores weren’t being invited to the meetings and if they went they felt left out.” Jenkins, who wasn’t in the league last year, became president after talk ing to an art professor, she said. Pat Rowan told Jenkins the Arl League was dying and asked her to be president, Jenkins said. This year Jenkins and vice presi dent Ed Uhart have been active ir recruiting underclassman. ‘‘We want to make them fee welcome and get some new blood ii the league,” Jenkins said. Jenkins and Uhart have madi announcements at art classes and pii up posters. The league had a display at Fresli man Friday for the first time. The league is important becaus it’s in charge of planning the shows i the Art League Gallery in Richart Hall, Jenkins said. “This gallery gives students place to show their art.” The league is planning a bene concert for Oct. 13, Jenkins said. T1 will be tne nrsi runa-raiser cvci nciu by the league, she said. About five local bands will play at the Culture Center, 333 N. 14th St. Admission prices still are pending, she said. Money from the concert will go toward the purchase of new track lighting for the student gallery. Other social events may be planned throughout the year, she said. The league is im portant because it's in charge of planning shows in the Art League Gallery in Richards Hall. --Jenkins i A T-shirt design contest will be l held this fall, she said. The winning 1 design will be used for the official Art League T-shirts, which will be sold 5 on campus. 1 The league determines which shows will be in the gallery by stu * dent applications. “We call everyone and look at c their artwork and decide what type of n show we’ll have,’’ she said. Is “ So far there ’ s been a lot of inter est.’’ a The gallery, located in 205 Richards Hall, currently is having an [it open show to get things going, len ds kins said. fiiite^§i§pient_ Author to give free reading I David Michael Kaplan will give a free public reading of his work at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the English department lounge, 228 Andrews. Kaplan is a young fiction writer whose first collection of short sto ries, “Comfort," recently was published by Viking Penguin. I UPC films start I nursaay Movie-goers may be be disrupt ing the silence this weekend at the Sheldon Film Theatre for the debut of the University Program Coun cil’s American Films division. The movie “U2; Rattle and Hum” will be featured Thursday. *‘U2; Rattle and Hum” will be shown at the theater at 7 and 9 p.m. Admission will be $2 few students with student identification cards and $3 for non-students. The UPC Foreign Films will be —1 showing “King Lcarv Fridayand Saturday at 3, 6 and 9 p.m. 1 nis movie, a twist cm dm original ver sion, stars Woody Allen, Peter Sellers and MoUy Ringwald Admission for “Ktoie Lear* will be $3 for students with student IDs and $4 for the general public. UPC also will be featuring some upcoming sneak previews. “Look Who*s Talking” will be shown Oct. 11 and ^Immediate Family” starring James Woods andGIennClose will be previewed Oct. 26. I Isolated group gets exposure # iYanomamo Indians featured _-1_ 11/a »am/4 *rv cm at Morrill Hall I By Jeff Engel ^B Suff Reporter _____ IS The Nebraska Slate Museum ot History is ■ presenting a look at the Yanomamo Indians ol ■Northern Brazil now through Oct. 13 m an ■exhibit titled “Spirits of the Ram Forest.” §§f The exhibit includes photographs, drawings ■and English translations of Yanomamo myths, ■which often serve as explanations of drawings ■made by the Yanomamo. Three-dimensional ■objects from the State Museum’s own collec ■tion supplement the traveling show from the ■Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pitts ■ Curator and Associate Professor of Muse Hums and Anthropology Thomas P. Meyers ■said, ‘‘If we had ten people come out and say i ■want to learn more about the Yanomamo, and ■more about these cultural survival groups, and ■then went and did it, I would consider that ■exhibit a resounding success. We arc dealing ■with very small numbers.” f ■ The Yanomamo was a culture hugely out ot ■contact with the rest of the world until tne jHl920s, and then it was contacted only by mis sionaries and local fortune hunters. jj§ With a growing interest in forest commodj ■>es, land, and protection of borders, the Bra/i lan government is building a nortnern perime ter highway. The highway enters Yanomamo reserve land, and brings Western culture into contact with the Indians . One can’t help but think of the U.S. Ameri can Indian situation._ urt rft evieB-— "It’s a very parallel situation now, except the technology isso much superior now to what it was then, tha, the mentality ,nB^tUowaM conservation and toward Indian Pf°P'f\ls similar to what it was here a hundred years ag°‘The factofdle matter is, we arc going to be in contact, and the question is what do we do about it now? It is not a question ot Can we taketoese people away?’They want all of the Sings that modem culture has to offer now Foments of this problem that the exhibit deauTdh comc from different perspectives, phnim taken by Giovanni Saflino, a mission ^"thropolog.st, reflect the Yanc, mamo's tradiuonal lifestyle from 1968 to the nrrvtf.ni as seen by an outsider. P “The traditional photos tend to do as many museums do. We tend to say ‘This is the way the people were,’ and you and I have an image of them in our minds that this is the way they’ll always be. But, in fact, the changes come rapidly,” Meyers said. Missionaries supplied the Indians with pa per and felt-tip markers and the results, which are part of the exhibit, are illuminating. The Yanomamo drew representations of mythical figures and emotional states, such as anger and pain. . . “One of the interesting things about their artwork now is that it is indicative of the way these people are dealing with some of the problems. “Now we understand that toothaches arc probably also a product of Western civilization because they didn’t have the sugar cane be fore.” , _ . . Underlying the entire exhibit is a sense ot the inevitability of cultural contact with these people. Cultural contact, in the long run, has time and again proven devastating to these small, once-isolated cultures. They are willing to welcome, if not us, the technology, medicine and vision of the much elevated standard of living that Western cul ture represents. They may abandon an age-old way of living to become farmers competing with other Bra zilians, a competition in which rules the Yano mamo are singularly ill-versed. An entire cul ture will be lost to the world. “I think the Yanomamo can benefit from Western, technological society without throw ing away their own culture,” said Ronald Young, curator of special programming at the museum. ‘‘A person can spend five or ten minutes in the Yanomamo exhibit and come out perhaps a little more sensitized to the fact that this planet is full of all kinds of people, of cultures,” Young said. ‘‘Maybe he or she might walk away a little bit changed, a little bit more willing to accept a person.” Meyers said, ‘‘One of the things that people might do when they go to the exhibit is just try to take a look at one or two labels and the associated artwork and try to think about the relationships, try to deal with them. Often museum exhibits arc overwhelming unless you stand there and contemplate what’s in front of you, deal with it on a one-to-one basis. That s probably the way to look at any exhibit: don’t go to a museum once, go to a museum a dozen times.”