The Battalion LIFESTYLES Monday, March 26,1990 Klingons, elves, belly dancers gearing up for AggieCon XXI Photo by Steven M. Noreyko Under a lot of stress from last-minute prepara- displays various science fiction and fantasy items tions, weary AggieCon XXI Director Pat Edwards which will be on sale at the convention. By JOHN RIGHTER Of The Battalion Staff Mayhem and madness are the scheduled guests this weekend in Rudder Tower and the Memorial Student Center. For four days, Klingons, belly dancers, elves, transvestites from outer space and an assortment of other bizarre characters will take part in MSC Cepheid Variable’s 21st annual AggieCon. The extravaganza is one of the largest science-fiction, horror and fantasy conventions in the southwest United States, AggieCon director Patrick Edwards says. This year’s activities include some thing of interest for just about every one. On the agenda are celebrity guest speakers, panel discussions on topics in the science fiction, horror and fantasy fields, a Lazer Tag maze in Deware Field House, a live-action role-playing game called Quest, a dealer’s room, board-game areas, an art auction, nonstop movies and an imation films and much more. AggieCon XXI officially begins at 2 p.m. Thursday, when the dealer’s room, art show, party room and Ja- Battalion file photo Walter Koenig, who has played Chekov in both the television and movie versions of “Star Trek,” will speak at 5:30 p.m. Friday in Room 201 of the MSC as part of this weekend’s AggieCon XXI. panimation and movie rooms open. Members of Cepheid Variable will open a “Drench the Wench” dunk ing booth outside Hart Hall at 10 a.m. Thursday to attract publicity for AggieCon. At 5:30 p.m., opening ceremonies will begin in the MSC Flag Room, featuring a performance by Nancy Winds of Magic Belly Dancers. Highlighting the weekend, Ed wards says, are the Con’s four special guests. Author and “Star Trek” ac tor Walter Koenig will speak at 5:30 m. Friday in Room 201 of the SC. He will sign autographs in the Serpentine Lounge at 8 p.m. From 9:30 a.m.-noon on Satur day, Richard Pini, editor and co creator of the popular “Elfquest” graphic novel series will speak, nar rate a slide show and sign auto graphs in Room 261 of the MSC. Spider and Jeanne Robinson, winners of the Hugo and Nebula, science fiction’s most prestigious awards, will speak at 4:30 p.m. Sat urday in Room 201 of the MSC, fol lowed by an autograph session in the Serpentine Lounge. Many regional writers and artists also will participate in the panel dis cussions and autograph sessions. AggieCon activities will run from 8 a.m.-2 a.m. on Friday and Satur day, and will end at 2 p.m. Sunday. A comprehensive schedule of events will be posted outside the AggieCon headquarters in Room 203 of the MSC. A full-Con pass costs $16 for adults, $13 for students and $6 for children ages 4 to 12. A one-day pass costs $9 for adults, $7 for students and $3 for children. Tickets are available at the MSC Box Office and at all Ticketron outlets. A ticket into the dealer’s room can be bought for a quarter, but it will not allow you into any other Con ac tivities. Additional tickets are also nec essary for the Lazer Tag games ($1), to participate in Quest ($5) and for the movies shown each night ($2). Tickets to the Friday and Satur day midnight showings of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” at the Grove will cost $1.50. Edwards rec ommends buying tickets in advance, since he says “Rocky Horror” is one of the Con’s most successful attrac tions each year. Rodeo cowboys' athletic talent often unrecognized By VINCE SNYDER Of The Battalion Staff Eight seconds may not seem that long, but for a rodeo cowboy it can be an eternity. Rodeo is a sport that pits man against beast, skill against power, luck against winning. Not many people appreciate the talents displayed by the cowboy and animals alike. But both are key ath letes in a sport that has been around for more than a century. The sport of rodeo may not be as popular today as it has been in the past. But with the help of a certain rodeo producer, the past may once again join the future. Hoping to attract a young audi ence, Bad Company Rodeo produc ers have brought the sound of rock ’n’ roll music to the rock ’n ’ rough style of rodeoing. “We’re trying to offer a different flavor to the sport,” Bad Comapny producer Mack Altizer said. “Rodeo is heading in the wrong direction of politics instead of enter tainment. We think we’ve found a way to turn it around and continue the entertainment into the ’90s.” Tunes are played over a state-of- the-art sound system as two-ton bulls attempt to discard unwanted passen gers straddled across their backs. Each bull is named to a hit song, and that song is played during the eight-second ride, encouraging fans to rock to the beat and cheer for the cowboy. “Funky Cold Medina,” “Wild Thing,” “Takin’ Care of Business” and “Wooly Bully” are just a few ex amples of the “animal-song” combi nations used during the perfor mance. Bad Company displayed their new innovation last weekend in the National Intercollegiate Rodeo for the southern region. The event, sponsored by the Texas A&M Rodeo Association, was held at the N.W. “Dick” Freeman Arena in College Station. See Rodeo/Page 5 The three-man “Saddling Sirloins” team won the Bad Company Rodeo steer-saddling competition Photo by Eric Roalson Friday night by being the first to cross the finish line with a rider on a saddled steer. Lifestyles Editor Mary-Lynne Rice 845! Austere Angels Fall 1 draws audience inside inspires its compassm ByCHIPSOWDEN Of The Battalion Staff In The Aggie Players’ Fallout Theater is host to a radioactive production that will leave you with a special glow. “Angels Fall” is a play about six people trapped together in a small New Mexico mission after the release of radio active dust from a nearby ura nium mine. But “Angels Fall” is really about the people involved and how their lives are changed by the time they spend together. And as the characters get to know each other, the audience gets to know them. Although the play seems sim ple at first glance, the characters relate in complex ways and as they reveal more about them selves, the audience is drawn into the action. The austere set also draws you into the play, quite literally. The benches that serve as pews in the mission come right up to the first row of seats in the theater. As you walk in and take a seat, it seems you could be sitting in the back row of this little church where the action takes place. You feel like a part of the set. At the beginning of the first act, the Rolling Stones’ “Wild Horses” comes over the sound system. Don Tabaha (played by Ross Lambert), an Indian who grew up living in the mission, comes into the church and sits down after tossing his knapsack aside. It takes a second to realize that the show has begun. Soon, the other characters en ter the church, having no place else to go since they are trapped by roadblocks due to the accident at the mine. The confrontations begin immediately. In one humorous scene, Zappy Zappala and Marion Clay (played by David Roberto and Kathy Schultz), are arguing about the delay while Niles and Vita Harris (played by Allen T. Horton and Kelly Roman), look on. Roberto repeatedly asks, “Do you mind?” as though the Harrises should go somewhere else. But they have no place to go. fact, everyone in the seems out of their natural t( ement, except, of course, forfi ther Doherty (played by Billy) Thomas). We know that we are seeiiii just one facet of each characters they pass through this stoppim point on their way to someplao else. But the play gives jus enough information to imagk the other facets of the character! and it is this process of imajp tion that makes them come alive The most immediatly likeable character is Zappy Zappali whose aggressive, well-meaniii; but not terribly smart demeanor is well-played by Roberto. The play’s major theme of knowing who and what you are crystallizes during Zappala'i speech about his realization that he was to become a professional tennis player. On the other hand, Niles Har ris, a professor who has lost confi dence in his profession, suffers an emotional crisis. But heissi able to convince the young la baha that the direction his school ing is to take is his choice alone Unfortunately, some of the pro lessor’s lines were difficult to un derstand. T( sf UCi 3 Idl iLi . Ear i Although the production o!|| m this play isn’t up to the standardH a 'j ’ of larger productions by the Ah gie Players, “Angels Fall” is per naps better for it. As it is, the characters are able to shine through unencumbered. The real measure of a play like “Angels Fall” is the extent to which it makes you care about its charac ters. And as 1 left the the I noticed that most people wliei ii. \ become of cared. the characters. Thei I; aterj were talking about what wastoL ^ P “I le f “Angels Fall” will play even |f ace night at 8 tonight through Satur f day in the Fallout Theater, ingr Room 144 of the Blocker Build |f So l ing. j-. 1 ■ Le Tickets are available at Rudder B oni Box Office. Prices are $4 forstu ll^ (>r dents and the general public and R 3 ^* 1 $2 for season ticket holders. For B l( tu more information and reserva-B tions, call 845-1234. fr'PP Dry) Preservation Hall relives heyday of New Orleans jazz By PATRICK HAYS Of The Battalion Staff The New Orleans jazz group Pres ervation Hall brought a piece of the Aggieland Friday lal 1 At: he a tea dose dart row ■ctin| )avn Crescent City to night, playing originaFDixielandjazz for more than two hours in a well- packed Rudder Auditorium. The concert, sponsored by MSC OPAS, gave the audience a taste of the music which came out of the roaring 1920s and made New Or leans the birthplace of jazz. The group’s two sets included up beat instrumental and vocal arrange ments and blues tunes which had the musicians’ instruments crying with feeling. Each of the band members played solos on most of the songs, trading off moments in the spot light. The band consists of seven mem bers: Wendell Brunious (trumpet and band leader), Frank Demond (trombone), Frank Parker (drums), James Prevost (bass), Lars Edegran (piano), Narvin Kimball (banjo) and Willie Humphrey (clarinet). The spirited Humphrey was the highlight of the show. In addition to playing fantastic clarinet parts, he danced and bounced about the stage, making gestures and jokes as well as winking at women in the au dience — all at the tender age of 89. Included in the band’s sets were “Tiger Rag,” “St. Louis Blues,” “Be cause of You” (featuring Kimball), “Sugar Blues,” “Louisian-i-a” (fea turing Demond) and “Little Liza Jane” (featuring Humphrey). “Sugar Blues” was one of the best songs of the evening, showcasing Brunious’ trumpet and fantastically sweet voice. The band closed the show with an extended version of the jazz classic and Preservation Hall trademark, “When the Saints Go Marching In.” As Brunious and Demond paraded through the audience and led doz ens of fans onto the stage, the rest of the crowd responded with a stand ing ovation. Throughout the show, the band members were thoroughly relaxed, chatting and joking with each other. The band maintains an informal atmosphere — rather than following a set playlist, the band chooses its songs as the show progresses. They even took a couple of requestsFrid night. It was clear that the crowd! joyed the performance. Lookii down rows in the audience, ne; every foot could be seen tapping the music. Fans responded cheers after the solos. The show carried with itacerti amount of nostalgia. Not on [Con I he show carried with its certain amount of nostalgia Not only are these musicians preserving and carrying on the tradition of jazz music, they created it Some of them were around when jazz was in its infant stages, being played in backstreet bars and small clubs. The years of experience can be seenofi the faces of these men as they play the music which has been so much a partoi their lives. Th, Wm his r 'arly j Ba< hind P rying on the tradition of jazz muss they created it. Some of them were around whe 1 jazz was in its infant stages, beinj played in backstreet bars and snU clubs. The years of experience 0 be seen on the faces of these men# they play the music which has bef 1 so much a part of their lives. Preservation Hall is also the nan# of a jazz club in New Orleans, estah lished in 1961. Jazz music was at low point at that time, and a grotif of musicians opened the club in a attempt to preserve jazz music, tlt f only truly American art form. The club, located at 726 St. Pet# Street in the French Quarter, pr# vides a relaxed listening at# sphere, with wooden benches an( odd chairs for seats, and the wicker collection basket used in tit f early days of the hall. The band is one of several g which plays at Preservation when not on tour. 'tatio a i'aui e gea ; ti he st; la niu :o Ull( Als roc 'ras M , -at relp | to tog ■he st, Pol footb ptavei A tin Sh the "T| Ntk h[