Over the years, Jazz in June has become a staple of Lincoln summers. As such, there are certain practices and etiquette that have become the norm for event's attendees.
Uncertainty is most certainly your mindset as nine men step onto the stage, fitted head-to-toe in the most magnificently dated, short-sleeved dress shirts, coffee-colored ties, caramel-khaki dress pants, ferociously fixed facial hair and BluBlocker aviator sunglasses ever assembled in the 21st century.
Each and every day, we are confronted with the inescapable order of the natural world, the never-ending cycle of life and death.
With nuclear power comes nuclear waste. With nuclear waste comes the daunting task of storing this radioactive residue until it's rendered harmless to all life on earth.
When jazz musician Greg Abate finishes a set of hard bop and puts his saxophone back in its case, he doesn't head straight for the bar.
A closer look at the Nebraska Jazz Orchestra trumpeter's and guitarist's fingers at their Jazz in June performance Tuesday might reveal more than just chords or notes.
For the past two decades, Jazz in June has entertained crowds with the sounds of jazz in the summer.