Reader Reviews —————-————— Stills /Young Dying Buffalo By Gregory Hall Have you ever stopped to wonder what Buffalo Spring field would sound like, had they weathered ego-trips and time? With a little imagination, the answer can be found once LONG MAY YOU RUN hits your turntable. The results of listening to this album are mostly dissapointment and disinterest Back in the late 60’s, it was Stills and Young that foimed the backbone of the legendaiy Buffalo Springfield. Their music was the voice and fever that helped move a restless genera tion through the conflicts and change of the times. Also to their music credit they were amoung the founding fathers of the pop mainstream as it is today. After the demise of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young due to inflated egos and clashing personalities; Mssrs. Stills and Young went their own ways; Young up, and Stills into a downhill slide. As it is obvious from this recording, Mr. Young felt a bit charitable towards Mr. Stills’ condition, feeling as if it could use a shot in the arm from a friend and compatriot Hence this album, comprised of what sounds like outtakes and/or rejects from prospective solo efforts, is the result Lyrically, there is nothing here to be said that hasn’t been said better before. Young’s singing is lEEE By Kent Odenwelder The next meeting of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (LEER) of the Capitol Campus Student Branch will be held on Wednesday, 0ct0ber27,1976 at 7:00 p.m. in the Student Center. Final plans for the field trip to the Naval Research Labora tories, located in Washington, D.C., will be made at this meeting. The date for this field trip will be Wednesday, November 10, 1976. A film about the Naval Research Labs will also be shown at this meeting. Members should have a Junior nominee in mind for the election of a Vice-Chairone. This person should have the ability to leam the functions and operations of the LEER, so that he can be a knowledgeable leader next year. The first “Kick-Off’ meeting was a great success. Approxi mately 40 new members were in attendance. EDEJTstudents who are seeking membership may pick up applications and pay their dues at any meeting, or to an LEEE officer, or to the club advisor, Dr. Jeny Shoup- W-252. charitable and uninspired; whereas Stills tries to cany a tune and often fails. Nowhere to be found are the expected burning guitar duos or soaring harmonies; the product is polished and sterile like “chrome hearts shining in the sun,” as found in the title cut It sounds as if Neil Young has saved the cream of his new material for his upcoming solo album. The bulk of the Stills songs found in this set are mediocre at best Beautiful Crosby/Nash harmonies that were wiped off this album due to tempers and ever-conflicting swollen egos could have made the weaker compositions into credibly textured works. Con sidering the wealth of talent that has been or was involved in this project the end results could have been neargreat or at least capable of repeated listenings without a feeling of monotony or disenchantment I might actually be able to like this album if it wasn’t for the cold hard fact that this is Neil Young (and Steve Stills, too) playing the music, and I guess I expected a lot more from this collaboration: the potential is enormous. One should not take the cover too literally- the buffalo is not extinct* what we have here is two aging buffalos up against the barbed wire electric fence of a dying prairie. But there are other more fertile feeding grounds to be found. Perhaps fulfillment will be found in future solo efforts. Chi-Rho CCM The Chi-Rho Advisory Coun cil of CCM, made up of representative students, have planned some big events for the fall, and everyone is cordially invited to participate. The All Saints Festival on November 1, the Wine and Cheese Party on November 16, and an overnight retreat November 5-6 are on the agenda for next month. Every Sunday night in the lounge of the Student Center, the Eucharist will be celebrated at 7 o’clock, followed by a social, and a “Fireside Chat”, an informal, informational session which promises more light than heat The Chaplain believes that spiritual growth, as well as intellegtual and social develop ment is essential to the total fulfillment of one’s potential as a person. “Jesus Christ came to bring life in the fullest” he added. “Why settle for anything less than that?” Father Richardson plans to be on campus Thursdays, from 10 until 2 p.m. He can also be contacted at his residence (561-1248), or his office (652-7401). Pick up a Catholic Campus Ministry flier at the Counseling Center, for further information. The Devil Made Me Do It By Ann Clark If the purpose of “The Omen” is to give you a good scare, director Richard Donner has succeeded. He has com bined excellent photographic and sound effects and film editing to create some very tense scenes. “The Omen”, however, purports to be an interpretation of the Book of Revelation, and here it has failed. The plot lacks credibility, but it is this lack that makes the film entertainment rather than enlightment The story revolves around the premise that an Anti-Christ, or son of the Devil, is born in human form. His real mother is a dog, which makes him the ultimate son-of-a-bitch, but Gregory Peck and Lee Remick are deceived by a priest into taking the baby to raise. For his part in this, the preist gets a severe case of acne. (Jf you can swallow all this, you are well on your way to repenting before it’s too late.) Gregory Peck and Lee Remick turn in their expected fine performances, but just wooden enough that you really don’t mind what happens to them. And just about the time you get involved in the plot, it starts to fall apart. The supporting cast is very good, Buddies For Sale Cheap Thrills By Debbie Young About 100 people eager to do their bit for a good cause, attended the Meade Heights Board of Governors (MHBOG) “Buy a Buddy Day” last Wednesday in People’s Park. “I wanted to bid on somebody just to support the activity,” said Martha Singleton, 7th term business. “Also, I had a lot of fun doing it” The reason for “Buy a Buddy Day”, according to MHBOG President Pat Laurie, was to provide some socialization for the new students. “No other organizations were having anything,” Laurie said, “so, by having this we could let the students start to get to know each other.” Of the 50 people who signed up to be auctioned off, about 30 people were bid on. Some of the bids started at one cent but Chief Paul, Campus Security Director, opened at one dollar and was finally sold for $8.50. He was sold to wash a student’s car. Pat Murphy, Resident Living Coordinator, was sold to do laundry. Besides these services, people were selling things like guitar lessons, companionship, body painting, back massage, dinners for two and even a ride in a sports car through the country. As the afternoon progressed and the beer disappeared, some Cold moot makes a dry sandwich. “Habrtw Provsfb” especially the five-year-old boy who plays the devil-child. The child has two nannies, the first a real swinger, and the second, well— she’s no Mary Poppins. The interesting part of the film is the manner in which a series of deaths are photo graphed. Watch for the goldfish bowl falling off the balcony. Yes, they even bump off some innocent goldfish. Another death scene shows a man being decapitated, but if you can detach yourself from the honor of it, you can appreciate the way it was photographed. The death scenes in “The Omen” are not threatening because they lack the emotional involvement and intensity of, for example, the death of Billy in “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest” The viewer regrets not that the characters are mur dured, but the way they had to go. hi fact you leave the theater wondering, if the devil really had his shit together, would he have to go to all that trouble to knock off a few people. “The Omen” is good entertainment, but it isn’t thought provoking. At the worst you will be left with a fear of big black dogs and a nagging distrust of cute little boys. of the buyers were bidding more extravagantly. This was partly due to the auctioneer Lenny Klonitsko, SGA senator. He kept the bids moving and was very comical. Laurie, who thought “Buy a Buddy Day” was a success, would like to offer her thanks to everybody who helped with the activity. We at the C.C. Reader hope that all merchandise was worth purchasing. The newly elected officers of this years Resident Student Council are Rick Fly, president; Diane Sarsfield, secratary; and Ellen Whilden, treasurer. The outlook for this years council looks very promising as new ideas hare already come to the surface. They hare already Musical Mime By Win. Kane From New York, the Bronx and Queens respectively, to France and Poland simultane ously, then to Belgium, Italy, Spain and now a tour of the U.S.; the Musical Mime duo of Steve Colucci and Robert Ruggieri appeared in our auditorium Friday the Bth at lunchtime. Musical Mime is distinct bum Mime the silent art of acting and portraying bodily movement, in that, Ruggieri accompanies Colvucci on moog synthesizer and classical guitar. Colvucci said he became interested in Mime at a young age. When he was 14 he studied at the Falnworth and Hower School of Ballet in New York. From there he and Ruggieri went to Paris. Colvucci studied under Marcel Marceau in France, and in the Polish Mime Ballet Theatre under the supervision of F3la Yarogzewicz. After the shortened version of their 2 hrs. 15 mins, act, Ruggieri and Colvucci, who grew up together, headed to Reading next and hopefully may appear on the Merv Griffin and/or Johnny Carson show later this year. Among his repetoire of inventive Mime segments are characters ranging from one of the first, original, mime acts of Etienne Decroux’s “Man in a Box,” to the duo’s own creation, a segment entitled the “Uni versal Soldier.” Others included: “The Beach,” “The Astronaut,” “Walking Through A Storm,” the contemporary depiction of the Beatles “Rocky Racoon,” “Birth,” and a particularly interesting segment entitled “Metamorphosis of a Construction Worker.” Admission to this unusual, but certainly not uninteresting, performance was bee. Colvucci said he usually doesn’t perform for free, but this was a favor to our Coordinator of Student Activities, Roberta McLeod. Although Colvucci did not utter one word throughout his entire performance, he proved to the appreciative audience, that he was capable of communicating volumes. rollerskating this past Saturday at “The Golden Skate,” and are anticipating many more energe tic evenings. The council meets every second and fourth week of the month, in Wrisberg Hall, and all interested residents are invited to attend.