The Gallup Poll. WORK FLEXIBILITY. At Gallup you have the opportunity to choose: When vgg *oA - ChOOSe Our 6Bth & O location or downtown at 11 th & 'P* When vou worit - any combination of days & hours between 4 & 12 M-F. and day hours Sat. and Sun. (total 15 hours/week) How much vou mote - our average hourly wage s $6 * Gallup s best interviewee make $ 13 per hour If you like choices and flexibility in your job. and are interested in being a telephone market resec' interviewer, call Michelle Skaia for ah interview 489-8700 Monday - Friday. 9-5 ////// I-—- , ■ —— ~ Staff and Faculty Weight Control Program Classes start on City campus: February 20, 1990 12:10-12:50 p.m. Classes will be held at the University Health Center Classes start on East campus: February 22, 1990 12:10-12:50 p.m. Classes will be held at the Nebraska East Union Cost. $30.00 Sessions last 10 weeks For more information or to pre-register call 472-7440 or 472-7447 Sponsored by the University Health Center UNL is a non-discrimatory institution d Zero Continued from Page 9 The kind where the killer is exactly who you thought it would be, in the manner you expected, etc., etc., etc. Billed as being comparable to notable film shockers “Psycho” and “Blue Velvet,” “Apartment Zero” fails in the venue of being a psycho logical thriller. In fact, disciples of Hitchcock may be offended by the bastardization of innuenodoes to the film master. Unfortunately, this film is a proverbial bust in the archives of mind suspense thriller. “Apartment Zero” is showing Thursday through Sunday and Feb. 8 10 at the Sheldon Film Theater in Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery. Screen ings arc at 7 and 9:15 p.m. daily, and matinees are at 12:45 and 3 p.m. on Saturdays and 2:30 and 4:45 p.m. on Sunday. Merce Continued from Page 10 to, prior to their first exhibition. 4 ‘The way I work is by accumulat ing movement. One movement leads to another and so on. It’s an internal drama that is created. One movement is pitted against another, and the body is separated by movement. It’s beauty and emotion, an ambience all its own.” The Merce Cunningham Dance Company will perform at Kimball Recital Hall at 8 p.m. tonight. Though the event is sold out, a waiting list docs exist. Tickets for the perform ance are $ 10 and S8. Tickets for UNL students and youths 18 and under are half price. For ticket availability contact the Lied Center at 472-4747. TWISTERS: 1. Motley Crue-Dr. Feelgood 2. Young M.C.-Stone Cold Rhymin’ 3. Janet Jackson-Rhythm Na tion 4. Joan Jett-The Hit List 5. Alannah Myles-Alannah Myles 6. Paula Abdul-Forcver Your Girl 7. Technotronic-Pump Up the Jam 8. B-52’s-Cosmic Thing 9. Phil Collins-But Seriously 10. Milli VamlU-Girl You Know It’s True. , Courtesy of the Rsnch Bowl Richard Elliot Veteran jazzman to hit Omaha’s music scene By Michael Deeds Senior Editor Saxophonist Richard Elliot will play Omaha’s Ranch Bowl, 1606 S. 72nd St., tonight. Elliot, a veteran jazzman, re cently released his fourth solo al conm&Z bum, “Take To The Skies.” The heavyset Lyle Alzado look-alike now is louring internationally in support of the successful album. He has played with top artists such as Natalie Cole, Melissa Manchester, Rickie Lee Jones, the Temptations, the Four Tops, Smokcy Robinson, the Ycllowjack ets -- even (brace yourself) tcen queen Tiffany. Soulful saxman Elliot is one of the hottest in the contemporary jazz scene, even if he is a self-defined “musical prostitute” who will play with mall babes like Tiffany. He phases out a nice, sweet tenor sound that gets plenty of airplay from big-city radio stations. Elliot’s popularity, in part, can be attributed to his rise and musical growth in the legendary horn sec tion of Oakland’s (Calif.) now defunct Tower of Power. Tower of Power was a hard working band that backed up tons of musicians and went on to a major tour,opening for the sounds of Huey Lewis and The News. Elliot started his professional career in 1976 as a teenager. After landing a spot with a hom-and string section that was heading for Asia, Elliot began to take the saxo phone more seriously. ‘ ‘Take To The Skies’ ’ has been Elliot’s biggest album to dale. The crossover musical styles, as well as a vivid version of Percy Sledge’s ‘ ‘When A Man Loves A Woman,” have sent the album on a long ride on the Billboard charts. . Tickets are S10.75. Doors open at 8 p.m. FEBRUARY PERM WOff Perm, Haircut and Style Feb. 1-15 Promotional oiler* available with participating designers Not valid with other otters or promotions Long hair by consultation Not valid with partial perms ^_ Stop By Or Call For An Appointment rnnc(o««rt isissr VMnaBmlBHHMr ____ hSm* 475-5550 Cancer Society stages annual benerit By Troy Falk Staff Reporter Jazz Fest ’90, sponsored by Ameri can Cancer Society, will be held Fri day at the Lincoln Hilton Hotel. The fifth annual benefit features internationally acclaimed jazz vocal ist Lynn Carey, who will be accom panied by the Nebraska Jazz Orches tra, directed by Ed Love. The concert will end with an all-star jam session. Lynn Carey (daughter of Macdonald Carey of “Days of Our Lives”) has been singing and writing songs for 19 years. She has released six solo al bums and has appeared as a guest vocalist on six olhcralbums with such artists as Charlie Mussclwhitc, Barry Goldberg, Harvey Mandcl and Neil Merry weather. Carey’s soundtrack credits include “Beyond the Valley of the Dolls,” “Seven Minutes,” “Hollywood Harry” and “Radioactive Dreams.” In a phone interview from Los Angeles, Carey said she was looking forward to her arrival Wednesday afternoon to practice with the jazz orchestra. Carey, who just returned from the Soviet Union where she participated in a world conference on preservation of world ecology, said -Cfinfte&Cl she performed with many Soviet jazz musicians. After returning to Los Angeles, Carey said she started working with Russian musician Mikhail Muromov on a piece of music to be used in the ecology movement in the Soviet Union. “I have been giving to thisorgani zation and others like it for years,” she said. “Now I finally have the opportunity to write a song for them. ’ ’ Soviet citizens are just as fond of music as Americans, she said. “They were very friendly and outgoing, nothing like the stereotype most Americans have of them,” she raid. “Never confuse politics with people." People arc all people, she said -- and the people of Lincoln are in for a real treat Friday. Carey will perform a one-hour set featuring the big-hand sound. She said she also will sneak some rock and roll or blues into her set. The concert will be at 8 p.m. in the Hilton’s Grand Ballroom. Tickets arc S16 for general admis sion, $2(X) for a reserved table for 10, $30 for patron admission (which in cludes reserved seating and a recep tion with the artists following the concert), and $3(X) for reserved pa tron tables for 10. All patron tickets must be purchased or reserved by today. All proceeds will benefit the edu cation, service and research programs of the American Cancer Society. Youth Symphony plans annual Playathon for Saturday I I ne Lincoln Youth Symphony s annual Playathon will be from 8 a m. to 6 p.sn. Saturday at the Centrum Shopping Mall. Orches tra members will be raising funds for the Lincoln Youth Synwhony Travel Fund by doing what they do best - playing their instruments. Performances in recent years have included appearances at the Toronto International Festival in 1989 and the Midwest Band and Oithesaa Clinic in Chka& in 1986. University of Nebraska-Lincoln Associate Professor of Music Edu cation Brian Moore is conductor Jor the Lincoln Youth Symphony. Everyone is invited to see and hear this weekend * s performance. ■■■nwHnHMr