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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1975)
I ntl OM I I MLIUN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1975 page 3 Entertainment sings ... Crowds boogie to the music P£T£R ARNOTT M &ri on ette The ater preaents: By JOHN VANORE Battalion Staff Writer It has been said that there are no PR men in heaven. If, how ever, Friday’s Town Hall Series performance was any indicator, that old saying is on its way out. The press release handouts made Mandrill & the Hues Corporation sound too perfect — as they always do. But, for anyone looking for entertain ment, G. Rollie White was the place to find it. A crowd of some 4,500 people saw the headliners, the Hues Corporation, go through their highly polished paces as they danced and sang their way through an hour-long show, which included a few selections from their upcoming release. The Love Corporation.” Right at 8 p.m., a tape record ing of jungle sounds set the stage for Mandrill, the warm-up act. According to their press re lease, they play a bit of rock, folk, latin, gospel, jazz, soul, calypso, and classical. Close, but no cigar. For their musical style was really none of these. Rather, all these types of music were blended into a un ique style that defied strict categorization. Mandrill’s set opened with an intense drumbeat that drew the audience in like ants to honey. The drumming led into “Everybody’s Got to he Some body,” which was oriented to wards Santana’s guitar/percus sion combination. The second of their five songs was from their upcoming al bum, and featured Tommy Trujillo playing some fine guitar which sounded like it was fashioned after Jimi Hendrix. A strut followed and was a vehicle for some extended sol os. Ric Wilson, M.D., a graduate of Harvard Medical School, led off with a jazz- flavored sax solo. Trujillo cooked again on guitar, and Brian Allsop wrapped things up on bass. The calypso beat distin- Prison reformer calls walkout ‘over-reaction’ Associated Press AUSTIN — The top officer of a prison reform group said Monday he thinks prison director W. J. Estelle Jr. ‘‘over-reacted’ Sunday in walking out of the group’s convention after Estelle’s speech was interrupted twice. Charles Sullivan, executive director of Citizens United for Re habilitation of Errants (CURE), showed reporters a video tape of the “so-called Estelle incident” at a news conference. Although the question from the audience was barely audible, the tape showed a member of the audience asking Estelle about “foul play” in the 1974 shootout at the state prison in Huntsville. Two inmates, including South Texas drug king Fred Gomez Carrasco, and two prison employes being held hostage were killed as the convicts tried to escape. Sullivan said, “I was stunned, myself when Estelle suddenly turned and left the room at the Walker County Courthouse (Hunts ville). Carrasco was “only one of many matters we wanted to talk about,” said Sullivan. He mentioned medical treatment and alleged abuses suffered by the inmates. jSullivanrrfaid 4l«' , ft»d known Estelle for four or five years, and “1 hS£ve never seen him more nervous*' than'just prior to his aborted speech to CURE’s first convention. guished an instrumental jam and rolled into some blues rock. It was conspicuously played without the latin-style percus sion which had marked their previous selections. In the in strumental break of this Alvin Lee-ish number, Claude “Cof fee” Cave came out from behind his keyboards barricades. His “Say ‘Yeah’s ” got the audience up and dancing pretty quickly. “The vibes were beautiful. The response of the A&M audi ence meshed in with the com munications onstage to result in a high energy level,” said “Cof fee”, who studied at the Brook lyn conservatory of Music. Coffee and Wilson also de scribed their varied musical in fluences. “I began to pick up styles when I first started listen ing to music,” Coffee said. Wil son added that their influences range from Hendrix and the Beatles to the Moody Blues, Herbie Hancock, John Coltrane and even Stravinsky. The almost total instrumental sound of Mandrill sharply con trasted the ever-present vocals of the Hues Corporation. For in that band, the four musicians serve only to back up the three vocalists, H. Ann Kelly, St. Clair Lee, and Tommy Brown. The first thing one notices about Hues Corporation is their choreography. Although it’s slick and well-rehearsed, it sets them apart from other similar vocal acts such as the Tempta tions. The motions of all three singers vary slightly to the de gree that they establish their own individual identities onstage, rather than blending into a mechanical oneness. OMBUDSMAN If you have a question or com plaint regarding news coverage please contact our Ombuds man’s office between 6 and 11 p.m., Monday through Thurs day- We established the office to help you with problems re quiring the attention of any top editorial personnel of The Bat talion. Call 845-2611 or write Ombudsman, The Battalion, Texas A&M Univer sity, College Station, Texas, 77843. Texas Ret?aissai?ce festival Oct. 4'5 t 11-12, 18-19, 25-26 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Festival grounds will be a re-creation of a Renaissance village. Events include the Commedia del’ arte Players, The Carrousel of Horses, Cutthroats, Beggars, Pickpockets, Thieves, Witches, Monks, Poets, Shakespearean Playlets, Strolling Minstrels. TICKETS: $3 Adult. (at gate) $1 children 6 Miles Northwest of Magnolia on 1774 Inquire about Special Rates for Large Groups. For Information call: 713-789-1505 ON MARCH 11,N58,TNE UNITED STATES DROPPED AN ATOM ROMR ON MARS RLUFF, SOUTH CAROLINA. The citizens of Mars Bluff probably aren’t planning anything special to commemorate the day their town almost became the Hiroshima of the Pee Dee River, but with the Official National Lampoon Bicentennial Calendar, you can help remember this and hundreds of other black days in American history. Painstakingly researched to insure historical accuracy, the Official National Lampoon Bicentennial Ca/endar contains over 600 massacres, explosions, defeats, assassinations, crashes, bomb ings (intentional and accidental), panics, executions, lynchings, betrayals, mishaps, riots, sinkings, mutinies, rigged elections, armed incursions, stonings, fish kills, mass murders, and miscar riages of justice. While everyone else is running around making a big deal out of a boring battle the British somehow managed to lose, you can be cele brating the day 147 persons, most of them young women, perished in America’s ghastliest industrial fire. Or the day Congressman Preston Brooks walked on to the Senate floor and beat Senator Charles Sumner unconscious with a gutta-percha cane. Or the day con victed “trunk murderess” Winnie Ruth Judd escaped from the Arizona State Insane Hospital for the sixth time. And the Official National Lampoon Bicentennial Calendar makes a perfect gift that will continue to depress and annoy someone you love throughout the whole year. The Official National Lampoon Bicentennial Calendar, with twelve breath- takingly lurid illustrations, is on sale in bookstores everywhere for only $3.95. Conceived by Christopher Cerf Their act is extremely audience-oriented. “We want to make the audience a part of the whole scene,” said Lee. “We want them to come here and be happy. Everybody who comes is a member of the Love Corporation.” Lee said this in reference to their forthcoming album. “Get Down to your Rock and Soul” kicked off the set. It also laid down the framework for the rest of the concert in terms of singing, dancing and the band. Early in the set, trouble with the sound system gave the members of the group a chance to establish a tight, personal rapport with the audience, which probably explained much of their success. In stark contrast to Doug Kershaw’s inflexible and tem peramental reaction under simi lar circumstances last fall, voc alists Lee and Brown ad-libbed and joked their way through the technical problem. A couple in the front row set off the “He’s grabbin her leg!” issue, when St. Clair Lee spotted a couple getting cozy during the break which helped the band keep up their momentum. Two tunes from the new LP, “He’s my Home” and “The Love Corporation,” the title tune, led into some examples of the Hues’s interpretative ta lents. An up-tempo version of the Temptations’ hit, “Papa was a Rolling Stone” rolled right into “Touch Me in the Morn ing,” a Diana Ross number 0<<W V/eDNesMf , October! Rudder Theater 8pn TcictTS^ 1.00 at Rudd* Box Office C Kil Jrarx Under 13*. Net ftjr»»*>tt«d +he Rno+Utr PTSG Co'rrvmfHee Pres er\'t^-'t-(or EMPLOYMENT U. S. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Professional opportunities are available for those seniors and graduate students completing work in: 'Computer Science 'Economics Engineering (EE, ME, AE) ‘Fprpjgn Area Studies} , Foreign Languages \ (High Proficiency Required) Chinese Polish French Portuguese German Russian Italian Serbo-Croatian Japanese Vietnamese Korean Information Science 'International Relations 'Physics 'Political Science Psychology (PhD) 'Graduate Students Only All assignments are in the Washington, D.C. area. Some require foreign travel. Processing procedure requires several months. Obtain your application from the Placement Office. Mail the application to our office by November 1,1975. All qual ified applicants will be interviewed at an early date. beautifully sung by H. Ann Kelly. From “One Good Night To gether,” a soft soul ballad, the band rocked into the O.J.’s “Love Train,” which got a good part of the audience up and dancing. “Freedom for the Stallion,” their first hit single, met with a roar of applause and after a brief instrumental to in troduce the band, the whole audience was on its feet for “Rock the Boat.” After their set, Lee com mented that “Rock the Boat” is a part of the past, despite the fact that many fans come to a concert expecting to hear “forty minutes of “Rock the Boat. “It was basically a teeny- bopper song that can’t be re peated. In order to survive in the music business, you have to grow with it,” Lee said. Lee also noted that, as a part of this growth, the Hues Corpo ration is still about four or five years from becoming the ideal band they hope to be. Town Hall Special Attraction (^f) lnto * he m/c c ' fc * e presents The Captain and Tennille plus Kip Addotta Saturday, 4 Oct. 75T^udder Auditorium 8:00 p.m. A&M Student/Date General Public Zone 1 $4.50 $5.50 Zone 2. $4.00 $5.00 Zone 3 $3.00 $4.00 Everyone Must Buy a Ticket Tickets are available at the MSC Box Office, First Floor, Rudder Tower, 9-4 Monday-Friday. Sorry, No Camera or Recording Equipment Allowed X C ATTENTION FRESHMEN The Town Hall Committee is in desperate need of eight freshmen to serve as committee members this year. Membership will be decided from an applica tion and a short interview. Applications and interview times are available in the student programs office in the MSC until Friday, October 3, 1975 at 5:00 p.m. Here is a chance to get involved on campus and step into the MSC Circle. Join Town Hall today. /tep Into the m/c circle @e) URADUtTHNl Iff. M CLEAR UP YOUR FUTURE IN THE 2-YEAR AFROTC PROGRAM. What’s up after college? That question is enough to get a lot of young people down. Air Force ROTC college graduates have that worry, too. But their immediate future (and longer if they choose) is much more secure. As a commissioned officer, there's a good job...Travel.Graduate level education. Promotions. Financial security. And really, lots more. If you have two academic years remaining, there’s a great 2-year AFROTC program still available to you. Look into the details.We think you’ll be pleasantly surprised. And pleasantly rewarded. FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT * . LT. COL. JOE BERGSTAD RM. 209 TRICON, PHONE 845-7611 Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.