m ancin^« Llfcory^ay J ^Doors open at 7:30^ ^Resson begin at 8:OoV fThe PLA MOrI . 6600 WOSti Don’t drive home1 this summer just to see a doctor - you may eligible to use the University Health Center! Exhibits provide summer boredom cure You are eligible to use the University Health Center at reduced rates if you elect to pay the Health Center fee and you: 1) are taking three or fewer credit hours; or 2) were registered for the Spring 2000 semester and are registered for the Fan 2000 semester or 3) were a May 2000 graduate. All enrolled students are eligible to use the Health Center. Rates are higher if you do not pay the Health Center fee. If you are enrolled for four or more summer credits in any session (except Pre-Session), you are automatically billed for the student Health Center fee. Do you need help determining the best health care option for you? Please call our Business Office at (402) 472-7435 for assistance. Summer Hours: 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m., Mon. - Fri. 10 a.m. • 12 p.m., Sat. & holiday Caff 472-5000 for appointments MPuniversitV JKL Health Center 15th & U Streets dailyneb.com Shelley Mika Staff uriter A common complaint heard in Lincoln during the summer, uttered in a whiny voice, is “there’s nothing to do in this town.” And yet flipping through the phone book one may be surprised to find that out of nowhere, and often tucked away in little build ings no one notices, are galleries that provide new exhibits every month. Some may be a short walk down the block and into the exposed brick atmosphere of the Haymarket, while others may require a short day trip to Omaha. Either way, all provide an inexpen sive opportunity to view local and international art, as well as a resolving response to the com ment “there’s nothing to do.” Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery “Documenting Performance / Preserving Concepts,” May 2-July 23. This show is a tribute to per formance and conceptual art. The focus is to explore how artists have attempted to solve the dilemma of preserving their processes and actions. The show also presents I. ■ . artists who have worked the ten sion of preservation and docu mentation into the fabric of their work. Among others, the artists featured will be Christo, Claes Oldenburg, Terry Allen. Dennis Oppenheim, Michael Heizer. and Chris Burden. Leonard Baskin: “The Ultimate Need,” May 9-July 23. At the center of Baskin’s work is a mythological narrative of Jewish culture of the tragedy and heroism of the human condition. Different mediums include drawings, woodcuts, engravings, sculpture, and book illustrations. “The Perpetual Well: Contemporary Art from The Jewish Museum,” May 13-July 16. Meant to be an overview of the Jewish experience as seen through the eyes of contemporary artists, this show will include paintings, sculpture, prints, photography and installations borrowed from The Jewish Museum in New York. The artists represented are both Jewish and non-Jewish, but both share an interest in Jewish issues and iconography. Sixty-three works will be displayed by 65 artists, including Richard Avedon, Dennis Kardon, Deborah Kass, Annie Leibovitz, Joshua Neustein, ■ Get a FREE 8 oz. Biobge Detangling Solution with any Color or Perm Service when you come in by July 15. 2000. c— 474-4244 Call for an appointment. Great Location I • 5 Blocks South of UNL .. . . | „ Haircuts I • Plenty of Street Parking ■ Free Parking with $5.25 tO $5.75 I Park n' Shop next door In __■ the Carriage Park Garage Students, under direct supervision of licensed instructors, perform aM services. ,0upon ond with any purchase...^'" 9pie'J.* ! A Off OUl!#! Limit one coupon per eMMMM Limit is S3.99 Value. SBWR. bstaiVU/N _ _ _4«90 UigfWwn W * Adrian Piper, Larry Rivers, Joan Snyder, Doug and Mike Stam and Robert Wilson. “American Impressionism from the Permanent Collection,” July 21-September 24 Having toured six museums in the last two years, this exhibition offers a com prehensive view of the emergence of French Impressionism and its influence on American artists from the late 19th century through the early 20th century. Paintings by Childe Hassam, Johft Twachtman and William Glackens will be displayed. “Local Color II: Judith Cherry, Patty Gallimore, David Helm, Larry Roots,” July 26 September 17 “Local Color II” will focus on contemporary art of regional artists. The Burkholder Project The Burkholder has three areas where separate shows are displayed. The following lists the shows for each portion of the gallery. May: “A Season for Repatriation: Selected Computer Manipulations and Autobiographical Images by Patrick Drake” “Pigments of Our Imaginations” This show includes batiques by Sammy Lynn and multi-medium paintings by Patsy Smith. “B to the Fifth Power 5x5” You do the math. Five paintings by five artists, all, coincidentally starting with the letter B. Brasch, Bantam, Boiton, Burkholder and Brown. June: “Images from Western Nebraska” With Moody Leavitt and Whitmor Barnes “Vandenack and the Weaving Guild” / Gallery Nine May: “Doug Marx: Pottery” June: Brian Everman. Everman will present paintings of fruits and veg etables in pastel colors. Viewers may have seen Everman’s work at last year’s Farmer’s Market. July: Annual Invitational Members of the gallery will invite a guest artist whose work will hang with their own. Joslyn Art Gallery “Soon Come: The Art of Contemporary Jamaica,” May 13 June 25 Twenty Jamaican artists present 40 paintings and mixed media sculptures. “Midlands Invitational 2000: Works on Paper,” May 13-July 2 Joslyn selected art by artists from Nebraska and its six contiguous states. The focus will be works of art created on paper. “Marsden Hartley: American Modem,” July 8-September 24 Drawn mainly from the Weisman Art Museum holdings, the Joslyn presents a retrospective of the early American modernist’s paint ings and works on paper. “Twentieth-Century American Drawings from The Arkansas Arts Center Foundation Collection,” July 15-September 10 Drawings in pencil, watercolor, pen and ink, charcoal, pastels and silverpoint collected by The Arkansas Arts Center since the early 1970s will be presented. Charles Burchfield, William Glakens, Edward Hopper, Roy Lichtenstein, Reginald Marsh, Georgia O’Keeffe and Jackson Pollock are among die featured artists. The Bemis Center of Contemporary Art Jo Harvey Allen and Warren Rosser will continue to be dis played through May. June 11-August 27th “Terrestrial” an installation by Claudia Cuesta “Pleasure Grounds” an instal lation by Lee Boroson The Venue May: “Into the Garden” is com posed of two sculptors and one black-and-white photographer presenting garden-inspired pieces. June: New York artist Penny Feder shows floral monotypes. Code tops early summer movie list MOVIES from page 9 with broad strokes intentionally. As so many movies choose to root into the cause of every tragedy, debut director Sofia Coppola treats the mass suicide of four sis ters with the appropriate amount of vagueness, telling the story through of adolescent male admirers from across the street. They have no more answers for the death of the Lisbon sisters than we do. There are hints, of course: strict parents, the sui cide/ death of the youngest sister Cecilia early in the film, the aban donment of another Lux (Dunst) on a football field after her first sexual encounter. But Coppola sneaks hints of character in for die entire Lisbon family, as Woods and Kathleen Turner stand out as the rigid, nonplused parents. “Virgin Suicides” exudes the quiet madness of suburbia, and when it finally takes form, a direct answer isn’t needed. A haunting satire. ★★★ Vi