The Fort Hood Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 28, 1985 Page: 37 of 52
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By MARTY SERVAIS
On the strength of a success-
ful debut album called “Valot-
te” and of his last name Julian
Lennon recently embarked on
his first concert tour of the Un-
ited States not as a warmup
act but as the headliner of the
tour.
LENNON THE son of the
late former Beatle John Len-
non picked Texas as the state
to kick off his U.S. tour. He per-
formed sell out concerts in San
A ntonio arch 23-24 one in
A ustin arch 25 and two in
ouston arch 27-28 before
heading on to Louisiana.
om parisons to his father
ere inevitable for Julian on
5 this tour. He does in fact sound
and look similar to his dad he
1 obviously didn’t ignore the in-
fluences of being a Beatle’s son.
However one would hope he
S MJ
EVENT COOf
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THURS. NIGHT SPECIAL
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'Calendar Girl"
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Produced by PACE Concerts
An Evening With
LIVE IN CONCERT
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O tW tP S O IfK A S 4 1 4U SH
THE
PM OW IN CENTER
JULIAN LENNON
NC A E A S N O E E S
SUN- NAN
Lennon starts tour in Texas
would want to present him self
on this tour as Julian Lennon
the individual not Julian Len-
non th ex-B eatles son. He
does initially present him self as
an individual songw writer and
singer but towards the end of
the show he falls back on the
legacy. He could have gotten
away without performing any
en aterial. ut
perhaps he thought it was ex-
pected so he took the easy way
out and performed the Lennon/
cCartney composition “Day
ripper’’ and two other rock
and roll classics from the 1950s
(that incidently appear on John
en ’s 1975 album Rock
and Roll”).
uring th arch 24 San
A to io rfo rm a th
show opened with a unantici-
ate izarre act of jo es
an cin and waving bato
from Simon Drake who is intro-
duced as “a friend of Julian
A E S I
E O I N A S E N E
'tty
ROGER WATERS
PROS AND CONS.
ennon’s.”
ADULT. ESHJL
A*b. IkI. 1
1 5 0 0
1 9 S S 6
IT BEGINS with a suitcase
with two legs protruding out of
the sides walking out onto the
stage. The event gets stranger
as it goes along. It’s a 45-minute
act that the audience hopes will
somehow evolve into the con-
cert. But it never does. After the
unlikely appearances of Presi-
dent Ronald Reagan and E.T.
look-a-likes th show ends
with a 15-minute intermission.
Then Lennon comes out for
his performance. He starts out
with the song he wrote about
his father called “Well I on’t
Know” and goes on to play the
other nine songs on the “Valot-
te album. A surprise is the fact
that Julian doesn’t play the in-
tru ts he lay on th
album In concert Julian only
sings and plays tam bourine ex-
on Me a
“Valotte” when he plays piano.
EVENT COOK
E S
E 5 TR A
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LUNCH SPECIAL MON.-FRI. ’2 5 0
OPEN: 11-9 MON. THURS. 11-10 FRI. S SAT
11-4 SUNDAY
NEAR THE RAILHEAD CLUB
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SEAFOOD CENTRAL
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A MULTI MEDIA EXTRAVAGANZA WITH QUADRAPHONIC SOUND
TUESDAY APRIL 9 AT 8 PM
$14 $12.50 & $11 Tickets on sale now at The Erwin Center and all UTTM
TicketCenters: Hastings Records & Tapes (Northcross Mall) Sears (Hancock
Center & Barton Creek Square) The Performing Arts Center Joske’s (Highland
Mall) The Paramount Theatre Fiddler’s Green Rec. Center (Fort Hood) & SWTSU
Strahan Coliseum (San Marcos). NO CAMERAS.
Convenience Charge: 75*/ticket at UTTM TicketCenters ($1 at San Marcos).
NO REFUND
NO EXCHANGE
ESTELLA S MEXICAN
RESTAURANT
FROG LEGS
ALASKAN KING
CRAB LEGS
The only other instrument he
plays during the concert is a
huge harm onica on “Too Late
For Goodbyes.”
“Too Late For oodbyes.”
the second to last song in the
show is the one that gets the
audience out of their seats and
rushing up to the stage. Julian
does introduce anew song cal-
led Big om a” th
crowd was uch more delight-
ed with the familar “Too Late
For oodbyes” which is cur-
rently a hit single and video.
Closing out the show Julian
performs the only nonoriginal
composition of the night Ben
E. in ’s 1950s ta a
“Stand By Me.” After this song
the band left the stage but the
theater lights stayed down and
many in the audience held their
lit lighters in the air demanding
more.
JULIAN DOES com back
out to give them more. For the
encore Lennon and his five-
ember band reappear on the
stage wearing big cowboy hats
and perform two songs. But the
tw so th rfo rm
ade the encore almost a dis-
appointm ent.
The audience didn’t seem to
mind but the encores were the
Beatle song “Day Tripper” and
the Little Richard rock classic
“Slippin’ and Slidin.’” It was
sort of a disappointment that he
performed a Beatle song and
one of his father’s favorite rock
oldies.
lia as by no ean
booed off the stage for perform
ing a Beatle song. Both encore
songs ere erfo rm ed very
well but it was Julian’s parting
reminder to the audience that
his dad was a famous man. To
Julian’s credit he doesn’t rely
on his dad too much but it was
a rather disappointing end to
the show. An encore of new
songs showing the direction his
music career is heading would
have been uch ore satis-
fying.
Overall the concert was en-
tertaining. It will be interesting
to hear from Julian in the future
hen his career has matured
and he has ore of his own
material to choose from during
concerts.
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Thursday March 1985 THE
FT.<p></p>Answers
The Casey Memorial Library
is a rc in form a tio
here research materials are
readily at hand to be used' to
answer any questions. Below
are some of the questions re-
cently received by the library
staff.
Q: When was the pretzel first
made?
A: Pretzels were first ade
back in the fifth century. ur-
ing Lent Christians used a spe-
cial bread consisting only of
flour salt and water. A Euro-
pean onk took some left-over
dough rolled it into long thin
strings and then knotted each
string before baking. The result
was hat we now identify as a
pretzel. An observer noted that
the shape resembled a child’s
arm folded in prayer. Hence
the pretzel becam a symbol of
a in th te
season.
he ord re tz l” cam
fro th a rd
“brezel” which mean9-pretzel.
he erm an ord probably
am from th a tin ord
“brachiatellum which roughly
translates into “the likeness in
the shape of a pair of folded
arm s.”
Prom th©✓111l-CSENTINEL
Library
HOOD
I I I
Palmer Theater
Thursday & Friday “Karate Kid” (PG) 7:30 p.m.
Saturday “Breakfast Club” (R) 6:30 p.m.
Sunday “Breakfast Club” (R) 2 & 7:30 p.m.
Monday “Breakfast Club” (R) 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday & W ednesday “G hostbusters” (PG) 7:30 p.m.
Howze Theater
Thursday & Friday “Breakin’ II: Electric Boogaloo’
p.m.
Friday “Entity” (R) 9:30 p.m.
Saturday “Falcon and the Snow an” (R) 7:30 p.m.
“Body Devil” (R) 10 p.m.
Sunday “Falcon and the Snow an” (R) 7:30 p.m.
Monday “Teachers” (R) 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday & W ednesday CLOSED
TO BENEFIT SHRINERS HOSPITALS
FOR BURNED & CRIPPLED CHILDREN.
16 TONS OF ELEPHANTS
Q: Where are the taste buds
located on the tongue?
A: Four basic taste areas exist
on th tongue: salty sw eet
sour and bitter. Each taste is de-
tected by a certain place on the
tongue. Salt is tasted on the
first quarter of the tongue’s tip.
The sweet taste area runs along
the edges of the tongue from
about the middle of the tongue
to the tip. The sour taste is de-
tected by the taste areas run-
ning along the sides of the ton-
gue. The back area of the ton-
gue is for the sour taste.
Q: Why is it that we can fi-
gure skate on ice but not on
floors or streets?
A: The hardness of the sur-
face is not the critical factor
when trying to figure skate on a
floor. It is the composition of
materials that ake up the sur-
face that is im portant. When
so ate on ice th
pressure of the blades melts a
little of the ice. Consequently a
minute layer of water forms be-
tw een the skate and the ice.
This water acts as a lubricant in
uch the same way that oil lub-
ricates ach in ery to reduce
fric tio a allo sm th
ovem ent.
Movies
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The Fort Hood Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 28, 1985, newspaper, March 28, 1985; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth309699/m1/37/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Casey Memorial Library.