The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 16, 1995, Page 12, Image 12

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Helping People
Kelly Assisted Living has opportunities available for
those interested in immediate work in the growing field
of home care. Home Health Aides, CNAs, and Home
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SUMMER SESSIONS 95
Made any summer plans yet?
How about looking into summer classes!
Registration for all UNL Summer Sessions
begins March 20
Summer Sessions Dates are:
Pre-Session.May 15 - June 2
8-Wk Session.May 15 - July 7
1st 5-Wk Session.June 5 - July 7
2nd 5-Wk Session.July 10 - Aug 10
Summer Sessions Bulletins are available at:
107C Canfield Administration Bldg,
on City Campus
Summer — It’s Only Natural!
Free honky tonk tonight
By Jeff Randall
Staff Reporter
Hot new country duo Archer
Park will play tonight at Guitars &
Cadillacs at a price everyone can
afford.
1 LIVE 1
BANDS
The show is
now absolutely
free.
Tickets for
the show, also
featuring local
act the
Unforgiven, are
being refunded
by Guitars &
Cadillacs. The
$5 admission
charge was lifted after the band s
label, Arista Records, decided to
pick up the show, said club spokes
man Matt Rohlf.
“We’re planning on a big
crowd,” Rohlf said. “We’ve been
getting a lot of people at shows
lately, ahd I don t see any reason
for this one to be any different.”
Randy Archer and Johnny Park
had been successful songwriters for
other acts before meeting in 1992.
They decided to form a band to
perform their own songs. Their first .
single, “Where There’s Smoke,”
was released in August 1994 and
became an instant success for the
duo.
Charlie Thomas, program direc
tor for Lincoln radio station KZKX
FM (96 KX), said the diversity of
Archer Park’s music was largely
responsible for the duo’s success.
KZKX-FM is helping promote
tonight’s show.
“They can do rock and they can
do country,” Thomas said.
The doors open at Guitars &
Cadillacs, 5400 O St., tonight at 6.
The Unforgiven will take the stage
at 9, followed by Archer Park at
10:30.
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Classes Begin March 29 If A P I A N
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Sale March 13 -17
10% - 75% OFF
Come check out our great selection of sports
apparel and equipment, including
sweatshirts, shorts,
casual wear,
sandals, t-shirts,
balls, gloves,
racquets, and much
more.
Husker
■■■ Lied's
Campus Recreation
Center
Music
Continued from Page 11 ^
Despite Omaha and Lincoln’s large
college audience and the success of
Christian hit music concerts,
Sommerville said, KGBI has not con
sidered changing its format.
“You can’t be all things to all
people,” Sommerville said. “But we
do feel that there is aneed to attract a
younger audience.”
But KGBI is making an effort to
provide some programming for a
younger audience. Chi Saturday nights
from 10 p.m. to midnight, the station
features “Heart and Soul,” a modem
Christian top-40 show.
The show play s a countdown of the
top 10 songs from Contemporary
Christian Music magazine’s hit chart
and features one Christian album each
week.
Because KGBI depends on its lis
teners for support, there are no com
mercials on tne program other than
KGBI announcements. This allows
Heath Kramer, “Heart and Soul” pro
ducer and disc jockey, to play 25 to 30
songs during the show.
Kramer said about 5,000 people
listened to Heart and Soul each week
end. He’d like to do more, he said, but
his current time slot is all he can get.
“At this point,” he said,“we’re just
happy to be able to have the program
on the air.”
They may not have a home on the
air, but Christian hit-music artists will
continue to tour the area, usually stop
ping at Omaha churches,
Schweinsburg said.
Performing in a church rather than
a larger city auditorium is often the
artist’s preference, he said, because
churches are more intimate and
cheaper.
Schweinsburg said the October
1994 Steven Curtis Chapman/News
boys show, held in the Omaha Civic
Auditorium, cost $22,000 to produce,
not including Chapman’s fee.
He said the same concert held at
Omaha’s Westsicle Church would have
cost about $5,000.
Using a church also brings down
exorbitant ticket and merchandise
costs, he said. Tickets for concerts in
churches cost $5 to $7 less than the
same concert in a city auditorium,
Schweinsburg said.
There is some hope for those who
want more exposure to new Christian
hit music. If Schweinsburg gets his
way, Christian music videos may be
seen cm cable systems across Nebraska
by late October.
Grace College is trying to inform
Nebraska communities and cable op
erators about “Z Music Television,”
which Schweinsburg called “an MTV
with Christian music.”
Schweinsburg said he expected the
general public to support the effort
because they had heard Christian mu
sic and found that they liked it.
“They like the music and lyrics that
are clean,” Schweinsburg said. “They
present God’s truth, but not in a way
that’s offensive.”
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