Tuesday, April 18,1995 Page 12 I knew she was there. I tried to find her at least 20 times. Bullets shot out from nowhere, so I dove down a pipe. My time was running out. My pupils dilated by the lack of light, I made a last ditch effort to find her. My friends watched with brownie breath. And then, she was mine. Well, actually, she was Mario’s. A chorus of electronic music blared and the princess thanked me (Mario) for saving her, and my entire summer was over in one tell swoop. It started with a few inno cent trips over to my friend Jennifer’s house. Jen’s mom made the most wonderful mon ster waffles, and I couldn’t leave without trekking down to the basement to play a few games on the Nintendo. This was Nintendo before CD-ROM, before virtual real ity, before interactive gloves and three-dimensional images. To three small-town junior high girls with no lives outside of Kone Komer, this was the summer of 1988. Jennifer, Barb and I sacrificed a tan and camped out in Jen’s basement while the summer sun boiled outside. What started out as a few shots at level one turned into a major competition, and by the end of the summer, Jennifer, Barb and I were no longer good friends. We were the Mario brothers, Luigi and Mario, caught in a vicious feud of sib ling rivalry. During the summer, we worked our way through a can ister of sunflower seeds, our eyes glued to the set, too en grossed to go upstairs for lunch or dinner. One day, after going on a weekend vacation, I discovered —to my horror—that Jen and Barb had surpassed me and made it to the fourth level. I had to devise a tactic. I bought my own Nintendo and practiced hours into the night. Once I stuck with Mario for nine hours, breaking only to eat lunch. bo, to make the saga short, I eventually found the prin cess. And that was it, totally anti-climactic, until I bought Super Mario Brothers 2 and a slew of other games and spent much of my freshman year holed up in the basement. It scared me, really, and when it came time to pack it up and go to college, the Nintendo retired into the basement until Christmas, when I received a 7-Up Spot game. Needless to say, my broth ers and I were not seen until New Year’s Eve. But then I found a life. Or maybe I just can’t afford the neat-o, new computer games. Anymore, though, I don’t give a damn about some two dimensional princess. Let her rot. Paata Lavtgne, sophomore new editorial major and Dally Nebras kan senior reporter. Send your “D6j4 Vu” to the Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St, Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. Submissions must not exceed 300 words and become the property of the Daily Nebraskan. The Daily Ne braskan retains the right to edit or reject all submissions. Band still having a barrel of fun By Gerry Bettz Senior Reporter Math Sladky formed the Math Sladky Polka Band about 42 years ago. The band has changed quite a bit over the years, Sladky said, but die barrel keeps on rolling. Sladky of Lincoln leads both the three-piece and the five-piece ver sions of the band. “Back in the ’50s we had an eight-piece band,” Sladky said, “and we played on what used to be KLMS, now KMEM. “We were the KLMS Polka Band, and there was a live broad cast every Sunday, and the rest of the week it was recorded music.” The number and distance be tweenjobs has changed also, Sladky said. “Used to be three nights a week,” Sladky said, “Canada to Texas, Ohio and Michigan to western Ne braska and Kansas and both Dako tas. “Today, it’s about 50 to 60 jobs a year. “There’s people that get tired of playing,” Sladky said. “I keep look ing and finding new members. “I wish I had a list of all the young ones that I broke in and got started, and there were lots of sea soned ones. “That would be one long list.” One name that would be a part of that list is Ron Havlovic, a junior psychology major, who is both a tuba and bass player in the band. Like many of the people who dance ta the music of the Math Sladky Polka Band, Havlovic said polka music was a part of his past. “As far back as I can remember, my dad always had polka music on,” Havlovic said, “so you could say I grew up with it.” The heritage of the music also draws people out to listen to the band, Havlovic said. “There are lots of Czechs and Germans in this area,” Havlovic said, “and that’s basically the mu sic they grew up with.” Being a member of the band has been enjoyable, he said. “You get to see a lot of the coun tryside and meet a lot of new people,” he said. Future plans for the Math Sladky Polka band include a two-week tour of Europe this summer. “It’s actually been in the plans for the past 1 1/2 years,” Havlovic said, “and everything was finalized last month.” Jeff Haller/DN Junior Ron Havlovic plays a sousaphone along with the rest of the Math Sladky band Sunday night at the Blue River Lodge near Crete. Polka dancing can be fun for everyone, Sladky said, not just for the older generation. “But it’s been put down like it’s old fogey or something,” he said. However, Sladky said, all hope is not lost. “I’ll play for someone’s 25th anniversary, and the kids come be cause Mom and Dad said so, but the kids will come up later and talk to us and say, ‘We had a lot of fun.’” Go, shogi tournament will honor visitor By Bryan Peterson Staff Reporter To honor a visit to Lincoln by Takahashi Matsumoto, Consul Gen eral of Japan, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln will host its first go and shogi tournament today at 2 p.m. in the Nebraska Union. Matsumoto, an experienced go player, will join 10 others in play ing the game that originated in China two thousand years ago and has since spread throughout Asia and the rest of the world. Shogi, a chess like game from India, is not as popu lar in Lincoln. Kari Yanai, a sophomore eco nomics major, began playing go about six months ago. “In Japan, go and shogi are played primarily by older men,” Yanai said. “Most of the players in America are younger.” As go’s popularity increases at UNL, Yanai said she hoped the tournament would become an an nual event. “We would also like to start a UNL go club,” she said. Go players take turns placing black and white stones on a square grid made of the intersections of 19 horizontal and 19 vertical lines. Although go has far fewer rules than chess, it is a much more com plicated game, said John Ertl, a junior French major who plays both games. “They are both strategy games but chess has a more linear form while go is more abstract,” he said “Go begins with an empty, largei board which is gradually filled with pieces. In chess, pieces are gradu ally removed as a certain ending i« approached.” Ryoko Sasaki-Shuss, a lecturei in the Department of Modem Lan guages and Literatures, contrastec die games of go and shogi by saying that shogi was like chess while g( was a game centered on gathering territory rather than capturing « piece, as in chess. In conjunction witl Matsumoto’s visit, the public is in vited to join Sasaki-Shuss’ Japa nese language classes to witness performances of the Japanese tea ceremony in the Kawasaki Reading Room, 1126 Oldfather Hall, at 9:30 r a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. The discipline of studying tea, : sado, is only one of many Japanese pursuits dedicated to the refinement of the self, Sasaki-Shuss said. “Games like go might be pur 1 sued in the same way,” she said. ; “We use everything for the refine \ ment of the self. ; “The game of go is not for win t ning and losing,” said Sasaki. “Those are secondary. The most i important thing is to refine and pol - ish oneself.”