Does Your Heart Good. American Heart Association^^ Lied performance a foot-‘stomp’ing The Watering Hole "Home of Lincoln's Best Buffalo Wings" 1321 'O' Street Football Party All Day Stop In For Great Food & Drinks At Great Prices Before & After The Game Watch Football All Day On Out Big Sateen TV r~ ■■ ' ——— ■ GC I I M l I S Stop by Lincoln's County Cork for your post victory^—^ celebration ) needs. County Cork "The littie store with tire BIG Irish Heart" 2702 South St.*435-5708 -USE A DESIGNATED DRIVER 16900 rOy Sf, • Meridian Park • 466-5713 l musical success By Paula Lavigne Music Critic Got some garbage? Make some music. Trash can lids, brooms, buckets, wooden poles and other stuff that might come from a cluttered garage or overfilled gar bage bin made it on the stage ft Thursday night at Concert the Lied Center ' Review for Performing ___Arts. STOMP, a troupe of 11 perform ers, proved to a near sell-out crowd that a musical group doesn’t need an orchestra to be truly musical. STOMP amazed the audience with objects that one wouldn’t normally think would make good music, but the brooms swished, the trash cans clanked and the bins boomed. Although the “instruments” were unorthodox, the music wasn’t cha otic. As one vocal little girl remarked, “That was like real music that instru ments make.” * Her comment came during what was a truly amazing performance with hollow tubes. By plonking the tubes of different sizes on the ground, the performers made sounds that might have otherwise come from a synthe sizer. Besides the unique musical as pect, the performers put on quite a visual show — especially with their suspended drum set, which was a wall of lids and street signs. With a comedian, a Bob Marley look-alike and an Anthony Kiedis wannabe, the troop created a comic a cappella of body music and incred ible rhythm. They had everything — plus the kitchen sink. Yes, four performers came out with overflowing kitchen sinks suspended from their necks as if they were hot dog vendors. And after their electric perfor mance, the audience offered up some hand music of its own. Lincoln entertainment more than just football By Gerry Bettz Senior Reporter It’s the beginning of a long string of home games for the Huskers, but what do you do the night before the game? Or how about after the (cer tain) victory? Here are a few ideas: • The Hurricane, 11180 St., will be a happening place this weekend. Mojo Nixon does a show for the 19 and above crowd tonight. Doors open at 8 p.m., with a show time of 9. Tickets are $7. Saturday night will feature a per formance of Se cret Skin at 10, with a $3 cover charge, but 21 and over only, please. Sunday night is the premiere of a new college night with a DJ, open to anyone 18 and above. Cover charge is $3. The action starts at 9, and the ^ night is alcohol-free. • Mueller Planetarium offers another stellar set of laser shows this weekend with a Nine Inch Nails show three times tonight and Saturday night (8,9:30 and 11). The cost is $5 a seat, $4 with student ID. Sunday, the Planetarium shows “Laser Country” at 3:30 p.m., and the cost is $5 for adults, $4 with student ID, and $2 for kids. • For the crowd looking to do some dancing, toddle on out to the Pla-Mor Ballroom, 6600 West O St. (about five miles west of downtown Lincoln), to enjoy the Sammy Jensen Orchestra on Saturday night. It’s open to all ages, costs $6 'per person, and runs 8:30 to midnight. Sunday night, head out to the Pla Mor to catch the Sandy Creek Band and Black Water. They’ll play from 8 to midnight. Again, the show is open to all ages, and the cost is $5 per person. • Tonight at Knickerbockers, 901 O Street, local band Orange3 and Minneapolis band Slide Coaster hit the stage. Tomorrow night, local band Throttle and another Minneapolis band Six Day Lane, are the featured entertainment at Knickerbockers. Shows start between 10 and 10:30 p.m. and there is a $3 cover charge each evening. • Smokin’ Joe Kubek featuring Bnois King will Dlay for patrons at the Zoo Bar, 136 N. 14 St., tonight and Saturday night. Shows are at 9:30 both nights. The band will perform two 75-minute sets each night, and the charge is $5. Sheldon exhibit parades Precisionist interpretation By John Fulwider Staff Reporter A new exhibition at Sheldon Me morial Art Gallery and Sculpture Garden shows how a loosely linked group of artists viewed post-World War 1 America. “Precisionism in America 1915 1941: Reordering Reality” presents paintings by some of the foremost Precisionist artists: Geor gia O’Keeffe, Charles Sheeler, Alfred Stieglitz and more. George Neubert, Sheldon direc tor, said the Precisionists were artists who observed American imagery — industrial, rural and urban — and simplified the images, giving a pre cise, hard-edged vision of them. Precisionist paintings “bring honor and respect to American experience,” Neubert said, “and put it on a high artistic plane.” The Precisionists addressed the impact of factories, machines, planes and skyscrapers on the United States as it became the leader of the indus trial age. They also romanticized ru ral imagery. Photography was close to the heart of many Precisionist artists; many Precisionists were also famous pho tographers. Sheeler’s “Bams Red” is an ex ample of the photorealistic quality of many Precisionist paintings. It is so precisely painted as to be nearly in distinguishable from a photograph. On one level, Neubert said, it is so phisticated art. But on another level, it is an everyday view of a farm. “My Egypt” by Charles Demuth shows how the Precisionists, well educated in international culture and events, managed to create a uniquely American statement. The painting is a picture of grain silos — as impor tant to rural American culture as the Pyramids were to the Egyptians. “Precisionism in America” runs through Nov. 5. Admission is free.