arts Price's 'Live' is well deserving of applause By JANET DOERGE Collegian Arts Writer If you're not from Pittsburgh, and maybe even if you are, you may have never heard of Billy Price and the Keystone Rhythm Band. But perhaps soon you will. Offstage, Price gives the impression of the English teacher you tend to tune,out. But this changes the instant he puts on his sunglassses and steps onto a stage with a microphone. The man transforms into a pure blues enthusiast. The result of his • incredible metamorphosis is captured on his album Live with the Keystone Rhythm Band. "I've always thought there was something that happened live that special rapport with the audience that you can't get in a recording studio," Billy once said. And Live is wired with tough lean tempos that define great rhythm and blues."We were able to get that chemistry on wax," he noted. On the album cover, the band's name underwrites the singer's, but its members deserve equal billing. Price's "skating" voice hits its best notes along with his bandsmen. They build up the perfect tension to introduce his voice, meet it halfway during its course and coast down right along with it. What makes the band and its music such a rarity is an ability to stamp a song as totally original. Price is considered a blues revivalist but he doesn't just recycle old sounds. He's the real thing. Side one of Live spins on the turntable with its yellow label and shines all the way to the final groove. It opens with "I'm So Glad," wherein the singer welcomes someone special back into his life . Jim Emminger's tenor sax solos make the sound special. On "Precious, Precious" the lyrics are strictly blues. Price gets away with a silly line like "you're like ice cream, baby" because Glenn Pavone's punctuating guitar tones reassure that it's not the words that are significant, but that the emotions that the music expresses are paramount. The beat on Bobby Bland's funky "Good Time Charlie" conjures up images of the crowd dancing; this song really conveys the power of a live show. Even the vision of Price's shades reflecting the lights are clear on this one: Any song that commands one to "put on your red dress, baby" has to have been made for dancing, especially when it continues "I'm the last of the big time spenders/put on your blue suede shoes." • • Performances buoy „ Private Lives , By JANET DOERGE explorations of Amanda and Elyot's ability to carry off the alternating one particular scene, they start off Collegian Arts Writer marriage which leave an unre- currents of hot and cold between seeming very much at peace. Elyot solved tension between them. their characters in a perfectly compliments Amanda as 'the most Sophisticated wit and humor The aloof sarcasm with which "snobbish" manner. Thomas Foral thrilling and exciting woman' he's bounded off the walls of the Pavil- Amanda and Elyot speak to their (as Amanda's new husband, Vic- ever known. Laughing about the ion Theater Thursday night when untested spouses about the failed tor) and Laura Wernette (as Sybil past leaves them rolling on the floor Noel Coward's "Private Lives" marriage creates a real thrill of Chase) offer the perfect counterba- together. Then the answer to a opened successfully as the fourth anticipation for the the audience. lance as the abandoned mates, who question as to what Amanda was and final production of the Pennsyl- One just can't wait to see the tern- both lack the needed amount of doing when they weren't married vania Festival Theater's 1985 sea- pared wits of the former lovers sophistication and gumption it causes Elyot's jealous temper to son. Selfishness, jealousy and witty meet it's clear that their mar- takes to be the companions of the flare and hers to follow immediate cruelty are the backbone of this riage was a hectic one. When they long estranged spouses at the cen- suit. They are certainly an eccen snappy comedy about a divorced do meet, it's also immediately apter of the play. tric pair. couple, who meet again on their parent that they are destined to love Gitto's Elyot steps onto the stage In scenes such as this Barcroft second * hoheymoons with new and hate each other always. In her with cool over-confidence, his seems to be set free; her body mates, and reignite their old pas- conversation with Victor, Amanda clothes conveying a hint of notorie- language is smooth as she parades sion for and resentment of each refers to them as a couple as "two ty. When Wernette joins him the room. Her smiles are genuine, other. violent asses bubbling about in a onstage, it's readily apparent that as are Gitto's. They,• both as char- Amanda Prynne and Elyot Chase matrimonial bottle." she is the more "watery" of the acters and performers, enjoy the rediscover their mutual passion on The Pavilion Theatre is an excel- two. Wearing a simple but beautiful challenge presented by the play's the fairly nondescript adjoining ter- lent setting for this play. This close- dress, her innocent dumbfound ex- and characters' abrupt shifts in race of a hotel in France, where knit theater in the round provides a pressions of insecurity mark her mood. Their joy seems to rub off on chance has placed them. They first lighthearted, cozy atmosphere that character perfectly. Thomas Foral, the audience as well. appear with their new mates (Vic- invites the viewer into these char- always dressed in a classic suit, has Lisa Seacrist's performance as tor and Sybil) in tow, a duo de- acters' lives. The setting is so inti- a similar prosaic air in comparison Louise,the agitated maid who has to scribed by Elyot as 'something mate that everyone catches the to the waggish nature of Barcroft's tend to the aftermath of this ram steady to smooth out your nerves expressions, and gestures of cast charming Amanda. page, is a charm. She sums up a when you're tired.' However, the and other audience members alike. Amanda's and Elyot's reactions reaction to whole strange situation conversations of the two couples Judith Barcroft (as Amanda) and to each other can either be like a that the audience can understand are centered around questions and George Gitto (as Elyot) possess the magnet to steel or oil to water. In perfectly. Summer Session sponsors free concert Hugh Givens (left) and Doreen Hutchings (right), both University music faculty highlighting pieces by composers such as Schubert, Brahms; Mozart, Rodgers members, are the featured vocalists In a free concert being held tonight at 7 and Hammerstein and Gershwin. Also represented will be the work of John p.m. in the Music Building Recital Hall. Weather permitting, there will be an ice• Denver and the University's own Mike Reid. Givens' past credentials include cream social following the performance In the courtyard. Both events are open residency with the Virginia Opera Association and performances with the to the public. The program will include both opera and musical comedy, Altoona Symphony; Hutchings has also performed with the Altoona Symphony. Once again, Pavone's guitar is featured proMinently. On Otis Redding's "Since You've Gone Again" Price exhibits the complete control of an outstanding soul singer with the blues. Or maybe he's a blues singer with soul. His mournful voice is initially backed only by chiming guitar arpeggios and builds with intensifying emotion from there. But the impassioned sadness is still felt from the beginning. By the time the music picks up and the crying horns are added, the listener is ready to either comfort the singer or settle for swaying along and sympathizing. "Eldorado Cafe" is the only track that has appeared on the band's previous LP's. Powered by the irresisti ble groove supplied by drummer David Dodd and bassist Tom Valentine, it is the band's most popular song. The driving sax in the middle of the live version backs up the sound of the audience chiming in to sing the title. Steve Bisberger's keyboards buoy the whole number. The album's second side has amore definite blues feel to it. The gray label instead of the bright yellow is the first clue to the change.."l'm Sick Y'all" has the true tempo and piano and sax sounds that play out any familiar blues song. There is never a false note. Price's recent placement of songwriting as his top priority is apparent on his own "One Man, Two Lovers." The protagonist's "lying to one/cheating on the other" is about what Price once called "the obsessive quality of love affairs repeating the same mistake over and over again, knowing that it's no good but doing it anyway." The Rhythm Band's funky rhythms add just the right touch. "I Can't Lose The Blues" definitely has the gray touch inspired by the label. It has a slower, more serene way of dealing with the trials of love than any other track on either side of Live. "Turn Back the Hands of Time" starts off jazzy with the interplay of guitar rhythms backed by keyboards. Price's voice beckons in with a longing force, holding his pleading notes like a paperweight. And just as he proves his own abilities, he decides to give the band their credit on record, "These fellas are keepin' such a strong groove tonite I could sing all night on this thing." His voice coos to the backing of the band. "How 'bout it for The Keystone Rhythm Band!" The opportu nity should be given for the band to return the mention to him. Billy personalizes the moment by relating a strong ‘•f. ~ • •_ live statement. He asks the band to "take it down real low" and says to the audience, "See, I like to make believe that I'm not really in this nightclub here with you folks, but I like to make believe that I'm home with my woman when I sing...`oh darlin'...' " The words bellow from his heart. The audience obviously feels it too, and a lot of individual "yeahs" can be heard. After three moaning "pleases" the tempo picks up and acts as • the perfect lively ending to a live album. Any listener will dance away to the sound of Price ending *. ..P . '': , N:',..'. Billy Price and the Keystone Rhythm Band Hanks' new exhibits serious lack of character By JILL S. KOSKO Collegian Arts Writer A CIA agent sits in an airport Vogue (in which she has appeared, with the words of his boss running incidentally). Yet, as in Hanks' through' his head: "Pick anyone, case, her part isn't developed well just anyone." Into his view comes enough, and she ends up being a man wearing one red shoe his - barely more than another show decision is made. Suddenly, an piece. eccentric violinist's simple life has become the focus of CIA game of double-crossing. As "The Man With One Red Shoe" Tom Hanks ("Splash" ) is Richard Drew, a music composer and member of the Washington Symphony who teacheg violin to underprivileged kids. Drew is a hapless victim of circumstances beyond his control and knowledge. By a quirk in fate, he's been sin gled out as the unlucky chump, the false bait to send a faction of CIA spies off the scent of a case con cerning the CIA head. Keep your ears open the first ten or 15 minutes of this movie when the whole spy plot is set up, or you'll never be sure what the whole scandal involves some thing about CIA agents caught in drug dealings. One's never sure who the bad guys or the good gtiys are, or if there are any at all. The plot is scantily explained because it isn't the real focus of the movie. Most of the story •deals with the spies creating double meanings out of the innocent activities of a naive, bumbling musician. The lack of plot development annoying as it is can almost be excused, but the lack of character development cannot. A lot of great talent goes wasted, for this is nearly a star-filled movie prac tically every face is recognizable. Even "Squiggy" from "Laverne and Shirley" makes a cameo ap pearance as a grubby sewage worker. Tom Hanks' appeal is tremen dously underplayed. The movie directs its humor around him through external happenings, in stead of giving him the freedom to show his natural, boyish charm. Not only is he portrayed as placid, but he is placid. Jim Belushi ("Saturday Night Live"), as Drew's friend Morris, provides much more of the comic relief and incites some of the bigger laughs he's slightly reminiscent of Bill Murray in "Tootsie." Lori Singer ("Footloose") is a sight for sore eyes in this film. She's never been hotter as Maddy, the beautiful, efficiently cool spy assigned to seduce Drew. In de signer suits, an extremely low backed evening dress that reveals The Daily Collegian Monday, July 22, 1985 with a "Thank you so much" as cheers fade from the crowd. Price has suggested that Live is the best album of the three he has recorded. He has stated that "I feel I've achieved a lifelong goal, to have an excellent R&B band and to make a fine traditional soul record." Any listener would agree. He's not just for Pittsburgh natives anymore. Billy Price and the Keystone Rhythm Band are poised for national acclaim. Billy and your band, thank you so much. film more than just her back and nar row space-like shades, Singer looks like a model straight out of Because not enough time •is given for chemistry to develop between Hanks and Singer, the inevitable love scene which occurs between the two isn't convincing. We're expected to believe that she can fall in love with him over a scntimental violin serenade (Come on, now!) when minutes earlier she was pulling her hair out (literally) over his klutzy sex ual antics. Carrie Fisher ("Star Wars") is almost unrecognizable from her Princess Leia days. As Morris' unfaithful wife, she prances around in Drew's apartment in leopard skin underwear trying to get him to play Taman with her. Other supporting roles include Dabney Coleman and Charles Durning (playing the standard corrupt governmental "types") as ruthless leaders of opposite spy factions. If the script fails to devel op the main characters, then it succeeds even less with the minor ones, letting some potentially fun ny characterizations fall flat. Nevertheless, the actors all pro vide solid performances despite what they're given to work with, and while it's nowhere near being a great comedy, enough good laughs are scattered throughout "The Man With One Red Shoe" to keep it consistently amusing. Di rector Stan Dragoti ("Love at First Bite," "Mr. Mom") is the real savior of the project, produc ing a tight and visually slick style that keeps matters rolling at a quick pace. As with a James Bond flick, a lot of the fun comes from watching the dozens of spy tricks and gad gets employed. Little details are amusing too every spy wears sunglasses, for example, and the CIA head escapes electronic bugs by turning on sprinklers and re treating to his yard. Another big plus to the movie's appeal is its excellent music, which is similar to that of "Fletch" and "Beverly Hills Cop." It's another synthesizer-cre ated soundtrack with an even snappier beat than that of these two films. Listening to the music is almost more fun than watching the screen. Search for treasure is over By JOHN PLATERO Associated Press Writer KEY WEST, Fla. The discovery of up to $4OO million worth of treasure from the scattered wreck of a Spanish galleon came just in time for Mel Fisher to pay his bills, but it also was 10 years to the day after one of his sons drowned during the search. "Notwithstanding the deaths, it was worth it," the soft spoken treasure hunter said of the cargo of gold and silver carried to the sea bottom by the Nuestra Senora de Atocha. Fisher's son Dirk and daughter-in-law Angel, along with a crewman, drowned when their 85-foot boat sank on July 20, 1975, during an overnight break in the search for the Atocha. Saturday's discovery ended a 16-year search for the Atocha, which was sunk by a 1622 hurricane and scattered by currents and tides. "You can't put a price on this. It's fantabulous," Fisher said yesterday as he prepared to visit the treasure site, 40 miles west of Key West and a mere 50 feet underwater. "Two'weeks ago, I couldn't make payroll," Fisher said of his 75-employee firm, Treasure Salvors. In spite of that statement, he sports around his neck an 8-foot-long, 12-pound chain of pure gold retrieved years ago from bits of wreckage scattered across the ocean bottom. He had traced the galleon's voyage and the itemized contents of its cargo through musty Spanish records, and said occasional small finds of gold or silver jewelry and personal belongings from various parts of the ship had convinced him he was following the underwater path of wreckage toward the contents of the cargo hold. "It seems that every five years, we make a good, substantial find," Fisher had said in June, only days after he found $2 million worth of gold, pieces of eight and jewels from the decaying Atocha. "Today was the day," Fisher beamed Saturday, when told his two surviving sons had dug through about five feet Rain douses California blazes By RUTH BONAPACE Associated Press Writer A three-week siege of fire in northern California ended yester day after a weekend of rain, and federal officials set up a toll-free hotline to help victims of the blazes that burned 200 homes and more than 375,000 acres of brush and timber. Elsewhere, a 900-acre range fire in Washington State was nearly contained, as was a two-week fire in Idaho's Payette National Forest. An 8,000-acre range fire that began Thursday in Nevada was almost extinguished. In Canada, a 2,500-acre forest fire that forced the evacuation of more than 200 people in the British Columbia town of North Bend no longer posed a danger to the com munity, but there were fears a new new blaze could threaten the town. Rain all day Saturday and early yesterday helped douse the Califor nia fires, said Jerry Partain of the state Department of Forestry. 4 killed in Texas bus crash BIG SPRING, Texas (AP) The driver of a church bus that rolled over 2 1 / 2 times into a cotton field, killing four people and injuring 37, says the accident occurred on a section of highway soaked by heavy rain. "I came up on a long stretch of water and it felt like the bus lifted up and turned sideways," said driver Robert Scott of Big Spring. The bus, northbound on U.S. 87, crossed the median Saturday night and came to rest on the west side of the highway about 25 miles northwest of Big Spring in western Texas, De Expires 7/23/85 I FREE DELIVERY DAILY El Starting at 11 a.m. Wear your Pizza7r T-Shirt EYEZZX it into the store and get 1 free l_ 234.0182 one coupon per customer topping on a slice! 41? iii , - • no 0 Showers helped firefighters put out a blaze that destroyed three homes and $1.5 million worth of timberland near Redding, and an other in Jamestown, about 150 miles southeast of San Francisco, where two buildings were de stroyed and third was damaged, Partain said. Thunderstorms also cooled crews who were finishing work on a 1,620-acre fire near the Shasta-Trinity National Forest. The aid hotline in Los Angeles, which begins today and will be operating from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. through Saturday, will provide in formation on federal and state as sistance programs, said Ernest Medeiros, spokesman for the Fed eral Emergency Management Agency. It was set up to aid fire victims in Los Angeles and the counties of San Diego, Ventura, San Luis Obispo, Monterey, Santa Clara and Santa Cruz, which on July 18 were de clared federal disaster areas by President Reagan. partment of Public Safety spokesman David Wells said. The vehicle had come from San Angelo, and had picked up passen gers in Midland and Big Spring, au thorities said. The bus owned jointly by church es in Midland, Odessa and Big Spring was headed for a Northwest Texas Jurisdictional Conference in Lub bock, said a spokesman for the Ford Memorial Church of God In Christ in Lubbock. The Rev. Frank Nelson, pastor of the Powerhouse Church of God in 410 11 1110 • rIZZa II of silt and mud to find what looked like a "reef of silver." Sons Kim and Kane found stacks of silver bars, thou sands of coins and copper ingots, the bulk of the Atocha's treasure that was being shipped to Spain. An Indiana native, Fisher retired 21 years ago from his chicken farm in Redondo Beach, Calif., and soon af terwards took up the search for the Atocha. Next to his office is a museum where he displays some of the riches he's gathered over the years from scattered wreckage. Some of the treasure has gone to people who invested in the search. The Atocha, built in Havana and on her maiden voyage to Spain, was among a 23-vessel Spanish fleet hit by a hurricane off the Cuban coast. The storm sank nine ships and claimed about 550 lives, including 289 Atocha crew men. The Atocha and a sister ship, the Santa Margarita, were swept over a barrier reef and into the Florida Straits, where they sank less than three miles apart in less than 50 feet of water. But a month later, another storm ended salvage efforts by smashing the two vessels, scattering debris and riches over an 8-square-mile area where they were buried by silt and shifting sand • Fisher said much of the treasure will go on display in his museum, which costs him annual insurance fees of more than $20,000. • But he said there's no rush to bring it to the surface "We'll be in no hurry," he said. Each piece will be individually logged and cleaned, including about 250,000 coins in the estimated 500,000 artifacts that Fisher and his vice-president, Bleth McHa ley, believe they will find. McHaley said the manifest of the Atocha listed up to 1,- 200 silver bars. At today's prices the entire treasure would be worth $4OO million, she said. Even after all that Fisher doesn't plan to rest on his laurels. He said his next mission is to search for the Margarita. So far, only $2O million of the estimated $2OO million in booty aboard that vessel has been found. "We've put them out." $1 off any 16" Pizza with 2 or more items The weather worked against fire fighters in Washington state. A 900- acre range fire was almost con tained near Yakima, and 17 other fires totalling 30 acres were under control. Logging retrictions re mained in effect as hot, dry condi tions persisted. The 10,184-acre Payette National Forest fire, which was started by lightning July 8, was 65 percent contained. But 500 firefighters in Idaho continued to battle two other major fires, a 9,100-acre forest fire in French Creek near Riggin, and a 2,095-acre blaze in the Nez Perce National Forest, where flames raged past fire lines overnight. Thick smoke, high temperatures, low humidity and canyon winds hampered the battle throughout the weekend, said Nez Perce forest spokeswoman Mary Zabinski. "We're going through so many crews because of steep terrain and heat. There's a real firefighter fatigue factor," she said. Four other fires were burning on the Montana-Idaho border. Christ in Big Spring, and his wife Gail were in a car behind the bus when the accident happened. "Some got out on their own," Nel son said of the injured passengers. "Some -had to be helped out. They were not screaming and hollering. They were very calm. I could hear people crying." Thirty-seven passengers were tak en to Malone-Hogan Hospital in Big Spring after the accident and four were admitted in stable condition, said nursing supervisor Leslie Wil liams. police log • State College Police said Randy boxes of writing pens, a jacknife, from the First Floor of West Pattee Miller of Port Matilda was charged three cans of tennis balls, a golf ball Friday with simple assault in connection and a deck of cards were missing, with the beating of his girlfriend in police said the 300 block of South Allen Street Saturday. Miller was arraigned and is being held in lieu of $lO,OOO bail, police said. The victim's name was withheld because of her age • Terry Dransfield, 251 S. Pugh St., reported to police that a 10-speed bicycle, valued at $250, was stolen while it was locked outside 100 Heis ter St. Friday night or SatUrday morning. • Police reported that unknown person(s) had entered the State Col lege Senior High School Saturday • Monica Angle, 315 Walker, re through the gymnasium window. A ported to University Police that a bundle of social studies exams, two textbook, valued at $45, was taken Confidence in Reagan soars NEW YORK (AP) A majority of Americans polled by a news magazine said they are not partic ularly concerned about President Reagan's ability to meet the de mands of his second term following cancer surgery. The poll, released over the week end and scheduled to appear in this week's Newsweek, found Reagan's approval rating up slightly since .his surgery. It also found confi dence in Vice President George C (the difference.) KIN KO'S 256 E. BEAVER AVE. has been remodeled. • New Image • Same Low Price • Same High Quality 238-2679 1 •:~` _' ©1985 Domino's Pizza Inc North: 237-1414 Hours: Sun-Thurs. 11:00-2:00a.m. 1104 N. Atherton Fri.-Sat. 11:00-3:00a.m. I Limited delivery area Customer pays applicable sales tax South: 234-5655 Our drivers carry less than $2O 421 Rear E. Beaver L Expires 7/24/85 • University Police Services said Martha Zepp of Leola reported the front wheel of her vehicle had been stolen while the car was parked in Parking Lot 83 West sometime be tween last Monday and Friday. Esti mated value of the wheel was $B5. • Geraldine Tevera, 121 Ritner, • The Ultimate Frisbee Club will reported to University police Satur- hold Frisbee practice and tutorial at 7 day that her bicycle, valued at $350, tonight on Old Main lawn was stolen from a rack outside her dormitoi7 Bush running fairly high. Of 753 adults polled by telephone July 17 and 18, 57 percent said they were not too concerned or not at all concerned about Reagan's ability to meet the demands of his second term. Eighteen percent said they were very concerned, and 22 per cent said they were fairly con cerned. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points. Sixty-two percent of the respon- 1 Free 6-pack of Pepsi with any large, 2-item or more pizza 111111111111111 I I I I I I I I - I I I I I I The Daily Collegian Monday, July 22, 1985-7 • University police said Kathrine DeShong reported that her wallet, valued .at $5O, was stolen from her office in 138 Sparks Saturday. —by Doug Popovich notes • The Student Assistance and In formation Center will hold peer coun seling, information, advising and referral sessions from 5 to 10 p.m. today in 135 Boucke. dents said they believed the doc: tors treating the president did the best job possible, while 27 percent said they believed the doctors should have discovered and treated his colon cancer earlier. The president's approval rating in the poll was 68 percent. Sixty-three percent of those polled said they had a great deal or a fair amount of confidence in Bush's ability to take over the presidency. one coupon per customer