Previews Nothing new about Huey and the News Grab Grandma and Grandpa, wake the chil dren, break out the Apple Pie...Huey Lewis is com ing to town! Performing Sunday, September 21 at G. Rollie White Coliseum, Huey Lewis and the News will deliver the wholesome sound they are famous for — upbeat, bip-boppy mu sic that’s easy to sing along with, great to dance to, and just a heck of a lot of fun. However, if Huey’s newest album, “Fore!” is any indication, fans should not expect any thing new and different from this middle-aged pop musician. Despite his demonstrated versatility, Huey is just doing more of the same old stuff. Granted, the same old stuff is really good music. His previous album, “Sports,” is a hard act to follow, featuring hit tunes like “I Want a New Drug” and “If This is It.” Besides, why should Huey try originality when he already has success? It took him a lot of trial and error to create an image and a sound that would appeal to the masses, and chances are he just doesn’t want to tamper with a good thing. In an interview with “People” magazine, Huey admitted that he has com promised himself in cre ating music that will sell, labeling what his band produces as “good music that is commercial. ” The name (he was born Huey Anthony Cregg III), the hairstyle (he used to wear it long and scraggly), even the clothes and the on-stage antics have all been care fully put together to please his audience. Huey told Michael Goldberg of “Rolling Sto ne” magazine that a band must market itself, “make deals with the devil,” in his words, in order to get signed and earn a living. That’s not to say that Huey completely lacks sincerity. His theme is a positive one, his music is uplifting and full of hope. One track from that al bum, “Stuck With You,” is already climbing the charts. Students lined up for hours when tickets for the Sept. 21 performance of Huey Lewis and the News went on sale, attesting ei ther to the band’s popu larity, the lack of quality musicians that actually visit College Station, or perhaps a combination of the two. Whatever the case, Huey is a dynamic performer on stage. And Sunday night’s concert is sure to be a success. Duane Eddy & the Rebels will open the show, which begins at 8 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Dana Davis to perform mixed bag at Rumours If Dana Davis packs as much energy and enthu siasm into performances as she packs into inter views with reporters, the crowd at Rumours Sept. 18 is in for a rockin’ night. The part-Irish, part- Welsh singer and guitarist will mark the return of live music to Rumours with her soulful versions of tunes that run the gamut from hard rock to jazz to country and western. Da vis is so versatile that even she doesn't try to pin down her exact style of music. “I started singing pro fessionally at 13 — about 10 years ago. My very first stuff was pop and coun try,” says the native Houstonian. “Then, I branched into rock and hard rock. Now I'm doing acoustic rock. “I guess the best way to say it is that I’m back into denim again.” But before she got “back into denim,” Davis went through her “lea ther” stages during a two- year tour with hard rock bands in New York and Connecticut. Davis says that although she enjoyed her time up North, she’s glad to get back to Texas. “The music scene is very different there. In New York, marketing matters more than the music,” she says. “And besides that, everyone up there is trying so hard just to pay the rent that you don’t get the kind of cam araderie you do in Hous ton.” In spite of Davis’ Southwest roots, she finds inspiration for songwriting in things not usually asso ciated with cowboys or oil millionaires. She’s inspired by old movies with lots of gore and people going insane. “I write a lot about madness. Maybe that’s because I’ve been called crazy before,” she ex plains. And, after hearing Da vis interrupt the interview to describe a sunlit rain storm outside her win dow, it’s hard not to won der if her creative genius does get a little carried away occasionally. But, she points out, she writes about love and human relationships, too. Love is something Davis talks about quite a bit — espe cially when she’s referring to her career. “Well, of course I want to be rich and famous, just like everybody else wants to be rich and famous,” Davis says, “and I’m chas ing after that ever-elusive record contract. “The most important thing, though, is that I want to do my music for the rest of my life. There’s nothing I want to do mo- Davis’ show, which is part of the MSC Town Hall Night Gallery concert series, starts at 8 p.m. at Rumours, just behind the MSC Post Office. Tickets are $2 and are available at MSC Box Office and at the door. If you don’t want to commit the big two bucks without know ing exactly what you’re in for, Davis will perform a few of her songs Sept. 17 at noon by Rudder Foun tain. Rumour has it that both performances will be top flight. ELECTROLUSIS by V-— Cindy & Co. Medically approved perma- Probe type electrolysis, thermo- nent removal of unwanted hair from the face and body lysis, galvanic or blend for men and women. Tax Deductable Treatments 1055 Texas Ave. S. Suite 103B Complimentaiy College Station Consultations (across from A&M Golf Course) 764-9205 Mongolian Bar-B-Q & Chinese Food Buffet. 1503 S. Texas Holiday Inn College Station 643-1736 Mongolian House Restaurant r - " - jVi OFF Buy one Mongolian Bar B-Q & Chinese Food Buffet and get a Second for HALF PRICE with this coupon. Good only Monday-Thursday Expires 10-31-86 5