S CHEAP BOOZE! S # r\ 25% OFF ALL $ Y \\\ Wine & Liquor Items! ^ SL We're Going Out Of Business/ ^ A Comhusker Plaza ^ 2 \M Bottle Shop g ^ iHP 1st & Comhusker _ Monstrous Selection fit Discount Prices I Decorations Masks BkHoons \ Window Decals > Make-Up Wigs Costumes Animated Products 50% Off Greeting Cards " , ,P*iri^$ijp^liet 621 N. 48th St. • 464-8201 ; Hours: ; . 5500 S. 56th ♦ 421-7510 , ; M-F 9-9, Satv9-6, Siin^1; You’ll never want to dream again Haunting TimesiOct. 24 & 25 •7:30pm - midnight Oct. 29 & 30 • 7:30pm - 10pm Oct. 31 *7:30 pm - midnight College ID night*Oct. 24($i of adm. with college id) Location:Jaycee Building, 10951 N. 142nd St.,waver!y,NE Price:Adults - $5 During Oct. 29, bring a canned food item and receive $1 off For group rates call the Waverly Jaycees at 786-5252. 'Audience «. "f* " A must see graphics GRAPHIC from page 12 your head. Then, the audience does n’t enjoy it.” Schicker said the violent acts have been especially intense fbr the cast because they are centered on young people. “We’re all fairly close to the issue,” Schicker said. “I think we’ve been forced to ask ourselves what responsibility we take in our com munity for the people around us - whether or not we’re willing to get involved in these people’s lives to prevent such acts of violence.” Schicker added that dealing with the play’s violence every night in rehearsal can desensitize the actors. “The challenge is trying to make the acts of violence real to us so that our characters’ stakes are high enough and are at the actual level of people in these situations,” Schicker said. In addition to the play’s violence, the actors have been challenged by its dreamlike structure. “(The play) doesn’t move from point A to point B,” Shields explained. “It has a disjointed through line. It’s linear and it’s cyclic.” Rothmayer says this structure can be beneficial and challenging. “As a dream it’s both very free ing - because of the variety of things you’re able to do - and yet at the same time it’s very limiting because you still have to tell a story,” he said. Rothmayer said he wants the play to encourage discussion and provoke the audience. “I hope the audience feels, to a certain degree, a sense of moral out rage,” he said. “They should be angered by what they see. Some of the things that happen are pretty out rageous, and yet they happen every day.” “Minor Demons” runs today and Friday at 8 p.m. and Saturday at 7 pjn. and 10 p.m. at the Howell Stage in the Temple Building. Tickets are $3 at the door. Nikki Fox/DN STEVEN SHIELDS (sitting) and Jason Elders perform a scene from “Minor Demons,” a Druce Graham play. TKD6000 turns it up with ‘boom!’ From Staff Reports Former Breeders’ guitarist Kelley Deal, now part of The Kelley Deal 6000, brings her stylized rock to Knickerbockers Bar & Grill, 901 O St, tonight Deal formed the band after a highly publicized heroin-possession arrest. The band released its first album, “Welcome to the Sugar Altar” on Nice Records, Deal’s own label. TKD6000 is on tour to support its latest album, “Boom! Boom! Boom!,” which was released in August. The band is wrapping up a two-month U.S. tour, readying itself to hit Europe in November. The 15 songs on “Boom! Boom! Boom!” represent an edgier, more diverse side than the band exhibited on “Sugar Altar.” Pablo’s Triangle is set to open the 10 p.m. show. Tickets are $5. r .. . Benefit concert hopes to relieve bum victims JAM from page 12 opening spot for Ani DiFranco Friday night, a live album in the works and a three-week tour beginning next month. Also appearing at the benefit will be Omaha’s National B and Lincoln’s Baby Jason & The Spankers. All proceeds from the show go to the St. Elizabeth bum center to help research artificial skin, said Andy Goranson, Phi Gamma Delta philanthropy chairman. “The burn center in its almost quarter-century has treated over 20,000 patients, including chil dren, in its unit,” Goranson said. “(The show) works on two levels: All proceeds benefit charity and at the same time, we’re also support ing local music. It’s a win-win sit uation as long as people come to the show.” After three months of plan ning, all are primed to let music heal, Goranson said. « It should be a really positive event” Andy Goranson Phi Gamma Delta chairman “Everyone’s been really excit ed about this,” he said. “It should be a really positive event. And I hope other people will agree with us.” BW-3, Pepsi, Homers and Budweiser also are sponsoring the event. Doors for the all-ages show, held at the State Fairgrounds Grandstand Building, open at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $4 at the Nebraska Union information booth and $5 at the door. A cash bar is available for those over ,2} years old. r\ .