Arts & Entertainment Comstock concerts captivate small crowd By Jill O’Brien Staff Reporter They came from the University of Nebraska Lincoln, City Campus, East Campus, the neigh borhood, downtown, uptown and out-of-town. Bicyclists, motorcyclists, faculty and students. They came to hear Lucky Peterson, The Mil lions and rock star Roger McGuinn. A micro-sized crowd of 60 people congre gated at 1 p.m. Friday in an East Campus parking lot to hear the first musician on this year’s Comstock billing. Amiableand smiling, blues musician Lucky Peterson, wearing a white baseball cap, rocked the crowd with fast-paced blues, including a couple of tunes by Muddy Waters. For the first two hours of the festival, stu dents and faculty filtered in gradually. The crowd stood a safe distance— 12 feet — from the stage, hands in pockets, hips sway ing, heads bobbing and feet lapping to the music. Nearby, a white Red Cross van stood parked and aqua-colored Trafcon portable potties dotted the horizon. Police and security volunteers from the University Programs Council almost outnumbered the crowd. Rick Ossian, an English graduate student at UNL, worked security during the four-and-a half hour festival. “I love Lucky Peterson,” he said. ‘‘And I’m an old fan of the Byrds.” By 2:30 p.m., the crowd had swelled to 100 to hear The Millions, an alternative music group originally from Lincoln. Lori Allison, lead vocalist, dressed in black lace and black tights and bools, danced com pulsively, sometimes hopping down from the stage to dance alone off to the side. She danced on the asphalt parking lot, twirling and swirling in front of the audience as she sang tunes from the band’s latest release, *‘M is for Millions.” Allison’s uncategorizcd voice was pleasing to hear, clear and high. For one song, she crm unger/urM Larry Jacoby, left and Lucky Peterson, right, bang out a riff at Comstock. The concert was on East Campus and drew about 150 people by the day’s end. instructed the Comstock crowd to close in and encircle her in the parking lot while she sang a sorrowful tune about death and love. Harry Dingman III accompanied her enchanting voice on his acoustic guitar. By 3:25 p.m.. The Millions had sufficiently warmed up the audience as a handful of brave, uninhibited souls danced to the rhythmical guitar licks vibrating from the speakers. Derrick Dibbcm, a local acoustic player, took the stage next with his guitar. He an nounced that his scheduled partner had just sold his guitar and would not be performing with Dibbcm. Dibbcm apologized for having to play solo. No apology needed. Dibbem’s originals were as welcome as the sun — if there had been any sun. As gray clouds took precedence over a hopeful blue sky, Dibbcm sang, “I’m a rain drop falling down/Fly from the heavens into the ground/Flow from the river out to the sea/ That makes you and me.” See CORNSTOCK on 10 Director announces new Lied schedule From Staff Reports The roundup of performers to grace next year's Lied Center stage was announced Friday by Robert Chum bley, executive and artistic director of the Lied. The 1992-1993 season, which boasts 52 performances on the main stage alone, will feature both new and returning acts, Chumblcy said. “1 got just about everything I wanted,” he said. The Lied Center’s season will offer a balanced schedule similar to past years, he said, with four to six jazz and pop acLs, three to four symphony orchestras, two Broadway snows and a ihree-io-four-pcrformancc family series. University of Ncbraska-Lincoln students might be most interested in performances by Pat Mctheny, Kathy Mattea, Bobby McFcrrin, the musi cal “Lcs Miserablcs,” the Hubbard Street Dance Company and a one woman show by internationally ac claimed British actress Claire Bloom. One of the season’s artistic high lights, Chumblcy said, will be “Pilo bolus” April 23-24. The modem dance group emerged from a college dance class and has been using human mo tion to forge a new vision of modern Sept. 16- The Incomparable Rad Stare Rad Army Chorus and Dance Ensemble, 130-member music and dance company from the Commonwealth of Independent States. _ _ _ Sept. 26 - Pat Metheny, guitarist, composer, producer, synthesizer pioneer and Grammy Award winner. w _ Ocf. 11 - Kathy Mattaa, two-time Best Female Country Vocal Performance Grammy winner. • . .,.. . „ Oct. 17- Mbmaaota Opera, with newly commissioned creation From the Towers of the Moon." Ocf. 23 and 27- American String Quartet, UNL s quartet in residence. Oct. 24-25- "An Evening With Claire Bloom," internationally acclaimed British actress Claire Bloom wW performs different drama es<*everting~ the work) of women as seen by Wlfiiam Shakespeare and Charlotte Bronte. Oct. 30-31 - Hubbard Street Dance Company, a Jazz-dance company. Ho*. 4-6-Btaraof the Bolshoi Ballet, featuring Prima Balterlna Ase^gta Ekaterina Maximova and her partner Premier Dansuer and leading choreographer of the Bolshoi Vladimir VasHiev. Nov7i2- Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, the Queen s own orchestra under the direction of Vladimir Ashkenazy. . , .. Nov. 20-American Men Dance Theeter, the flmt to present the American Indian culture In a professional theatrical environment. Dae. 10-13 - The Christmas Carol, the classic Dickens tale. Jan. 09 - The Jungts Book, has been adapted from the book for the ataoe. Jan. 23 - Bobby McFerrin. vocal performer. . • ^ ^ ^ 10 ipoHit Folciortco Naclonal da Mtudoo, considered the most Fab. 13 -8X. Louis Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Music Director and Conductor Leonard Slatkin. . . _ Fab. 14-18- FWkRer on the Roof, a Tony award-winning musical from New ^Fab. 20-21 - Pickle Family Circus, a San Francisco-based traveling dance, daring physicalily, wit and imagery. Also a highlight will be an adapta tion of James Joyce’s “Finnegan’s Wake,’’ which was commissioned by UNL and the universities of Iowa, Minnesota and Arizona. The show will be developed in New York City and Iowa. “Finnegan’s Wake’’ is a huge, in ternationally visible project that will be an educational experience for the universities involved, Chumblcy said. For UNL specifically, Chumbley Scott M*ur«r/UN said the UNL dance department may have the opportunity to watch the performers of "Finnegan’s Wake” develop a new piece. Only season subscriptions will be available through the summer. Re maining individual event tickets will go on sale at a later date in August. The first week of the fall semester has been set aside as a time when only students can purchase single tickets. For more information on the up coming season call the Lied Center Box Office. Author tells stories in urgent, fury tone (booksMT The Boy Without a Flag Abraham Rodriguez, Jr. Milkweed Editions By Bryan Peterson Staff Reporter •_ “The Boy Without a Flag” is a collection of seven short stories by South Bronx resident Abraham Ro driguez, Jr., better known as the gui tarist of the punk rock band Urgent Fury. Rodriguez’s stories all arc set in the South Bronx neighborhood where he lived his entire life. They arc filled with violence and despair, but are also accurate portrayals of the char acters involved, revealing all the hopes and fears one might find among char acters in a more familiar selling. Milkweed Editions isa small press in Minneapolis much respected for the consistently high quality of the books and writers it presents. This collection of stories is not at all typical for a small press, since its urban war zone setting and upfront style are far from the usual serene, suburban prose of most contempo rary American short fiction writers. Rodriguez’s success lies in his ability to do more than create a scries of portraits of despair. The unceasing presence of violence, drug abuse and poverty in this collection easily can overwhelm the reader, but beneath these surface currents lies a piercing glimpse into the lives of the charac ters trapped in this neighborhood. The sense of being trapped runs \r through these stories and even helps lure the reader on to the next talc. From outside, the reader can look into this world and wonder w hy people do not leave such a concentration of misery. The characters do try to escape, but escape only in the most tempo rary of manners, turning to gambling, drugs, sex and violence — things which only serve to further enmesh them in their misery and hopeless ness. The reader wonders at first why the characters do not try to make the big escape, to permanently leave their neighborhood. As the book progresses, Rodriguez makes this clear. As much as it pains him and hurts the people around him, Rodriguez loves his neighborhood. These arc his people, his abandoned buildings, his littered alleys. He is too much a part of it to leave, as arc the people in Rodriguez’s stories. If there is a flaw in this collection, it is Rodriguez’s tendency to be too strong or blunt in his writing, occa sionally spelling things out loo clearly for the reader rather than allowing for the subtleties needed to enrich writ ing. But this may not be a flaw, consid ering Rodriguez’s background. The name of his band. Urgent Fury, fills these tales with its passionate anger. And that is the whole punk approach, being direct and angry, leaving noth ing unsaid or compromised. Punk rock is not subtle, nor are the living conditions of the South Bronx. Poverty and crime arc immediate and call for being handled in a direct, immediate manner. The lone of these stories, like the punk rock sound, may restrict them to a limited audience, but those willing See BOOK on 10