Thursday, November 16,1989 The Battalion Page 7 by Scott McCullar © 1939 so, zowe, tomokkow 100 CELEBRATE WKPP CRASH PAY, HUH? THE PAY AH ALIEH ZHIF CKASHEP ON YOUR RAUCH? —THREE YEARS A30. 'COURSE IT DIPH'T BECOME A TV ; STATIOH CHERHieHt ; IT WAS- 2 YEARS ...SMOOTHLY \Adventures In Cartooning by Don Atkinson Jr, WELCOME BACK TO •TH£ FIRST ANNUAL &Gor Olympics:" s GOD HffTES HOMOSCXUALS ? 50 IN THE GOOD BOOK! ^ ind^ allJ natkc iraei SPADE PH ILL I PS, Pi. by fOj 4TT~ HEY, Look tfr ALL those Gors we^ftjNfe THC V»ME CAOTMES And PUNNlrib . Sioe BTS»0€. the COUPS op CAOC.TS ^5Rt!K FASCIST Pi &s!i Uv. K% L 1: iSK nfoi- «"4i i pc-. :50. . Shi , Ski treei r :lOi| OWE; hue ; 25 Culture Club’s George hopes to reclaim stardom LOS ANGELES (AP) — Boy . George, the androgynous former president of Culture Club, is trying to dimb back up the pop charts after I surviving the crushing downers of heroin addiction and the overdose deaths of two friends. “I’m totally relaxed about my ■life,” he said on a recent stop in Los Angeles. “I’m totally relaxed about : what I am and what I do and what I ■ feel.” This is the first time the pop star, whose real name is George O’Dowd, /has been allowed in the United I States since his 1986 conviction for I heroin possession in England. The conviction, which led to the | disintegration of the hit-making Cul- Iture Club a year later, forced the I singer into a rehabilitation program. His current solo album. High Hat, I was released to favorable reviews ^earlier this year but didn’t get much | airplay in this country. He hopes his [U.S. visit will spur interest in the 1 soon-to-be-released single, “Whis- i per.” Now 28, Boy George hit the music [scene at the start of the decade as a | backup singer with the British group ° Bow Wow Wow. He eventually | formed his own group, the Sex Gang | Children, which later evolved into | the Culture Club. Boy George at- I traded the most attention of the- • foursome with his outrageous makeup, silky voice and 6-foot | frame. “If you look at the pop industry, ’ not a lot of people stick out as being particularly interesting. I think at ; the time we were the most colorful t thing happening,” he said. But in July 1986, Boy George was : arrested in London for heroin pos- i session. He pleaded guilty, was fined $370 and agreed to enter a treat ment program. Shortly after Boy George’s convic- ition, colleague Michael Rudetski ■ died at the singer’s London mansion ? from a heroin overdose. Then on Dec. 20, 1986, Boy George and pal Mark Golding were i arrested for marijuana possession outside a London nightclub. The next day, Golding was found dead in | his apartment from a drug overdose. Boy George is sensitive to ques tions about those troubled times. “I think it’s very difficult to put jinto words,” he said when asked what he has learned from the ordeal. “There are certain things that I feel that I couldn’t possibly explain with- l out making it sound really futile.” In Advance KANM hosts benefit concert at Sneakers KANM, A&M’s student-run radio station, will be hosting a fall benefit concert this Friday night at Sneakers (514 Harvey Rd., past the Taco Bell). The proceeds from the show will go towards ex penses and the purchasing of new equipment for the alternative ra dio station. Scheduled to perform are Les son Seven, a synthesized industri al/progressive-dance band from Dallas’ Deep Ellum, Houston’s Earth Army, an underground- hardcore/art-rock group and Bryan/College Station’s own pro gressive rocker’s Spittelfist, for merly the Monads. Also, drawings will be held throughout the night for free al bums, tapes and other music give aways from an assortment of re cord labels and musical genres. The benefit is scheduled to begin at 9:30 p.m., and the door cover is $3, or $2 with a KANM t-shirt, which are on sale through Friday in the MSG hallway. Judy’s play at Parthenon ‘Thrash Bash’ The Kappa Sigma fraternity and Pi Beta Phi sorority are host ing a “Thrash Bash” benefit to night at the Parthenon (815 Har vey, in the Woodstone Center). Playing at the benefit will be popular dance-rockers The Ju dy’s. Tickets are $6 and can be purchased in advance at the MSG or at the door. All proceeds from the eve ning’s performance will be do nated to the American Heart As sociation. ‘Mainly Mozart’ features pianist Hersh The third concert of the Uni versity Chamber Series’ 1989-90 season will be performed Monday at 8 p.m. in Rudder Theater. The concert, “Mainly Mozart,” will feature pianist/violist Paul Hersh performing two concertos with Maestro Franz Krager conduct ing the Brazos Sinfonietta. The performance will begin with the Brazos Sinfonietta play ing the Warlock’s Capriol Suite for String Orchestra and end with Mozart’s Symphony No. 29 in a Major, K201. Tickets for the evening’s per formance are $6 for adults and $4 for students and are available at the MSG Box Office, 845-1234. The following information was gathered from past issues of The Battalion and reflects issues that occurred during this week in A&M’s history. 10 years ago — About 200 stu dents rallied at Rudder Fountain in a demonstration concerning the Iranian hostage crisis. 25 years ago — The Battalion re ported members of the Corps of Cadets reactions to the students’ first week in the new air-condi tioned Dorms 14-16. “Old Army is goint to Hell,” one cadet said. A younger Corps member felt dif ferently, “New Army is great!” Old meets new. 50 years ago — Ground courses at tbe A&M aeronautic school be gan with W.I. Truettner in charge of instruction. 75 years ago — The local A&M football season closed with a 24-0 win over the Oklahoma A&M In dians at Kyle Field. When you finish reading The Battalion pass it on to a friend, but please... don’t litter! SUPERCUTS The Nation’s #1 Hair Styling Salon Now open in Culpepper Plaza! 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