Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
~ ··I
... -------
- ......
.··. .~.. . . . .
. .....
. . ... I II...
... ............
...........
. ....
1
Second Best ,
Mrazek Over 'Ii &
N *1% A 1 4--
a - -
Le Boutillier
page 3
Gabriel In
The Gym
page 12
~ii~ .........!!••!•ii~ii•i~
iii•!i•!i•i~~i/••i
i;i~iiii~!•i~
i••i!•~i~i!i•i~;••!•!i!i~i•!...
m^~:·:Z
- The Fourth Estate: Editorial
Phone: 246-6832
Photo Courtesyl/Winston Worrell
Office: 020 Old Biology Building
Mailing Address:
Front Page Photo Credits: Cuomo by Dan Magnus P.O. Box 591, East Setauket, New York
Lehrman by Dan Magnus 11733
Lew Loses
Lehrman is defeated in a very close race for governor
by Joe Caponi Across from that stage was a people mounted the podium and The crowd cheered the returns,
The man who has been called long platform with about a dozen called to the suddenly hushed but was visibly shaken by the net-
"the biggest drug dealer in New TV minicameras, with their neces- audience, "The networks have work projections, which are usually
York" and his supporters watched sary equipment and personel lined announced their projected winner accurate enough to scare anyone
and waited in Manhattan Tuesday up along it. By the speaker's stand, for governor, but they don't know on the losing side of them.
night as the man came tantalizingly an area was roped off for radio and what they're talking about." The important immediate news
close to being elected governor. large newspaper people, and behind I turned to Alan and told him covered, we de'cided to split up and
Millionaire businessman Lew the carn.- makeshift but exen- "OK, let's go home; this mingle. Dan went to take photo-
Lehrman, who made his fortune graphs, Alan went for the bar, and
through his string of Rite-Aid I began to walk through the crowd.
pharmacies, garnered 48% of the I noticed that the Lehrman cam-
gubernatorial vote but was unable paign had attracted the political
to defeat Democrat Mario Cuomo wimps and hangers on that any
for the state's highest office. The campaign does, except that Lehr-
Press watched the action from man's were more easily identi-
Lehrman's headquarters in the New fiable, as they were all wearing the
York Sheraton in Midtown Man- red suspenders that Lew has made
hattan. famous during the campaign.
Press photographer Dan Mangus, In addition, as I already knew,
our driver Alan Carr, and I arrived the important movers and shakers
at Lehrman's hotel at about 9:30 of any campaign never hang out
pm Tuesday night, a half hour at the election day party; they only
after the polls had closed in New put in short appearances. In fact,
York. After going down a few the most famous people in the
staircases from the plush lobby, we room were the television news-
reached the headquarters' ballroom, casters, especially ABC's Kaity
a large room full of about 500 Tong.
newspeople and Lehrman suppor- sive bar was set up. The room, like it's over," expecting that Dan returned to tell me that he
ters. Ringed with balloons and which would probably have been an Cuomo had grabbed a quick and had been kicked off the balcony
blue and white Lehrman/Governor elegant ballroom if it were empty, boring victory. But then the that encircled the floor by ABC
signs, a platform at one side of was also ringed by television sets, speaker announced the preliminary people who had bought the entire
the room was the rostrum, with both to allow the TV people to vote total and Lehrman was ahead area for the night. Alan came back
both a podium covered in micro- monitor their broadcasts, and to let by twenty thousand votes. The with even worse news, which was
phones, and a large blackboard to the Lehrman supporters watch the networks felt so secure in their that the bar was selling bottles of
show vote totals on it. When we returns. samplings that they had predicted Budweiser beer for the unheard of
arrived, the board was blank. Soon though, one of Lehrman's against the current vote total. continued on page 8
II~l l~lIr--1 ,I I . I I, I Ia I
ifi
a
Mraz e k 41
Th
IIaIMIiv^
I I
Lo
kl ii
i
inn
End a
*n
a
a
Dinner a
*«
by Bob Goldsmith
sophisticated (and thus) sought
a more positive approach." Indeed,
*« of the a
a
a
a
One of the most exciting races in
Thurs., Nov. 18, Bridge
something caused voters to cross a
this week's election centered on party lines because the 3rd C.D. a
a
controversial Republican incum- is about 110,000 Republicans, 41 a
a
bent John LeBoutillier and Suffolk 80,000 Democrats (roughly 7 to 5).
11-2 p.m.
4K
a
County Legislator Bob Mrazek who A key item which was expected at a
a
ran in New York's 3rd Congres- to work in LeBoutillier's favor but i a
a a
sional District. The race attracted may have turned against him was a Fresh Medlev of Fruit tI
I '
- II
I
_ - -
e a Diwali Celebration
SPOLITY 4 p
4th of Nov. 1982.
4~ II
S ELECTIONS 0 p
4 p
p
p
S When? - Tuesday, Nov. 9th 1982
Time? - 10 A.M. - 7 P.M.
* Where? - Residents: Near your quad office
4
0)
) Commuters & Stage 16: 4
0) also presents:
* Union & Lecture Hall
) For What? 1 Freshman Representative 4 ACHAANAK
* Referendum
0 starringVinod Khanna, Lila Chakra
S2. Student Assembly in Irving Col. 4I directed by Gulzar
) 3. Junior Representative
at Old Physics 137 on Nov. 6, 1982
Saturday, 7 P.M. sharp
SAmendment to the Polity Constitution: To remove Article XIII No (English subtitles)
S40 and to replace it with the following: 4C1) The removal hearing
cannot be held by the branch passing impeachment on the
4j
;
* accused. The removal hearing cannot be held by the branch in
which the official is a member. For the purposes of their own
4 EVERYBODY IS WELCOME
impeachment. Council members will not be considered Senate
members. 4
India Association wishes all Stony Brook
T 44C2) The removal hearing will normally be held by the Polity
* Judiciary. If the Polity Judiciary cannot hold the hearing because
is students and faculty members a Happy
Sof the reasons outlined in Part 4C1, it shall be held by the Senate SDiwall (Festival of Light)
or Council in that order, as outlined in Part 4C1. 1
*b dbA aAI AL
L II
I
=~-e ' 'LLII
aA
~ -~IBL1·l9w
AL
a
C PIom
RA a
w AL , / IIIr
mm-Iffirknwe
m11mm11mm119111
Wo
I
| BiK|| MMM MM..
. . M.. . . ...
I
* I IOcNIBt o...
*
S
NOVEMBER
S) I
0
S
4
S~
4
S 0
Wed.-Sat.!
Mondays 4
Super Party *
All You Can Drink! 0
* Tap Beer 4
Ol $5.00 (Bar Drinks) 9-12 p.m.
Last Tuesday, nuclear scientist clear war" was exposed with the $4.99 'till 8:00
atomic bomb designer and arms explosion of atomic bombs over
control advocate Philip Morrison Hiroshima and Nagisaki. While the e Your Meal Plan Card *
spoke to a full audience in the Fine amount of destruction done to
those cities was roughly equiva- L)
:k by Popular Demand 4
Arts Center Recital Hall.
speech was about what he called
His
lent to that done to other cities Soul Food Night 4I
the "single most important issue" such as Dresden and Tokyo, the
of modern times: that of the nu- time factor was very different.
The destruction of these cities was
clear weapons buildup, and con-
cluded with a call for the swift caused by thousands of planes Wednesdays Devastation
implementation of a verifiable nu-
clear weapons freeze with the
and thousands of bombs over a
period of days or weeks, while i Dan Show 4
Soviet Union. devastation done to Hiroshima
and Nagisaki was inflicted with
) For those who love to dance *
Dr. Morrison, a professor of
physics at MIT, was a key scien- one plane and one bomb, instantly.
Since then, the nuclear striking
2250 Beers I
tist in the Manhattan project which
led to the development of the power of the United States has * Thursdays
atomic bomb.
involved in a
He later became
broad range of scien-
increased thousands of times, and
that of the Soviet Union has risen SDisco-Reggae-Rock-Punkk
tific problems, particularly
area of astrophysics.
in the
A gifted
to match our own.
Calling the nuclear arms race a
* i with D.J. Sheik tem-an-davi 4
totally profitless one, Morrison
writer and lecturer, Morrison writes
the monthly book reviews in Scien- called for the two superpowers SDance Contest with Prizes *
tific American, but he is now best to begin to come to an agree- 0 0
known as one of the most intel- ment to simply stop building
ligent and eloquent opponents of
the proliferation of nuclear
additional nuclear weapons.
stressed the need for such an
He
^ Fridays & Saturdays
weapons.
To explain his position to those
agreement to be verifiable and
argued that such an agreement PARTY NIGHTS! 4
Morrison gave the would not hurt the current mili-
present,
examples of World Wars One and tary strength of the U.S.
Eventually, Morrison said, the
SFri. Nite RESONANCE 4
Two, in which, he explained, the
total amount of destructive energies
released was the equivalent of mil-
two superpowers could reach agree-
ment on reducing the amount of
Sat. Nite SLANT 6
lions of tons of TNT, and that that weapons. This, he concluded,
destructive energy required several would be the only way to increase The End of the Bridge, at the Top of the Union
years to be fully unleashed. But in the safety of the people of the 246-51399
1945, what Morrison called "the world.
& r &mbe^
Nove'&*& 498 age5
m
_ I -- ~ I -I · · I
page 5
November 4, 1982
by the
AftarteMB Smi1r1 Cmm
estU
Tuesday
DAKA-UNION CAFETERIA
Hours: Mon. to Fri., 8 AM -
: 25¢ off Roast Beef Hero I
7 PM. Sat., San., 9:30 AM -
. .. r. . I.W - 3:30 PM. Nov. 25-28, Closed.
Dec. 23 (Thurs.), 9:30 AM - Sigma Beta Auditions for Talent Show: rm. 231/214/236, Auditorium, 7 pm; Stony Brook Outing 7 PM. Exceptions: Nov. I One Coupon per Hero I
3:30 PM. Dec. 24 (Fri.), Club meeting: rm. 237, 8 pm; Auto Mechanics' Course - beginners: rm. 080, 7 pm; Omega Sigma 25-28, Closed. l Expires 11/9/82
Closed for intersession. Psi meeting: rm. 214, 7 pm; Assertiveness Training: rm. 223, 3 pm; Dream Appreciation Workshop:
rm. 216, 3:30 pm; Tuesday Flicks presents "Viridiana": Auditorium, 7 & 9:30 pm; Hypnosis and BOWLING CENTER
END OF THE BRIDGE Weight Reduction: rm. 216, 12 pm; Overcoming Social Anxiety (For Men Only): rm. 214, 11 am; Hours: Mon. to Fri., 11 AM- lWatch for Grand Opening Specials#n
Immmmm m m mnmmmmnmmmmmm
Overeaters Anonymous: rm. 216, 5:30 pm; Sailing Club meeting: rm. 216, 8 pm; Fantasy Campaign 12 AM. Sat., Sun., 12 PM-
Hours: Lunch, Mon. to Fri.,
Club meeting: rm. 214, 8:30 pm; Pre-Law Society meeting: rm. 237, 3:30 pm; NYPIRG meeting: 12 AM. Exceptions: Nov.
11 AM - 2 PM. Dinner,
Mon. to Sun., 5 PM - 8 PM.
Brunch, Sat., Sun., 10:30 AM
rm. 223, 8:15 pm; Gay and Lesbian Alliance meeting: rm. 226, 8 pm; Backgammon Club meeting:
rm. 216, 8 pm; Hillel - Informal Study Group: rm. 236, 6:30 pm; Health Survey meeting: rm. 214,
25-28, Closed. Dec. 24,
Closed, will reopen during
intersession.
SMAIN DESK
5 pm; Kevin Walker - comedy rock: Rainy Night House, 9 pm.
- 1 PM. After hours kitchen,
Mon. to Sat., 8 PM - 12 AM. Wednesday BARNES & NOBLE
SPECIAL OFFER
Bar hours: Mon., Tues., Wed.,
ENACT (Environmental Action) meeting: rm. 079, 7 pm; Sigma Beta Auditions for Talent Show: Hours: Mon., Tues., Wed., Callard & Bowser
11 AM - 12 PM. Thurs., Thurs., 9 AM - 7 PM. Fri.,
Fri., 11 AM - 2 AM. Sat., rm. 231/214/236, Auditorium, 7 pm; Inter-Varsity Bible Study: rm. 226, 1:30 pm; Riding Club:
9 AM - 4:30 I'M. Sat., Sun.,
CREAMY FUDGE BARS
rm. 216, 8 pm; For Parents of Adolescents: rm. 216, 12 pm; Irish Club meeting: rm. 223, 8:30 pm;
Sun., 10:30 AM - 1 AM.
Exceptions: Nov. 25-28. Israeli Folkdancing: Ballroom, 8 pm; Alcoholics Anonymous meeting: rm. 223, 1 pm; SOYK meeting: Closed. Exceptions: Nov. - Rum flavor with Raisins
25-28, Closed. Dec. 24
Closed. Dec. 24 (Fri.), Closed rm. 237, 7:30 pm; Womyn's Newspaper Club: rn. 214, 7 pm; "Bong Show": Auditorium, 7 pm; - with Peanuts
Student Leadership Training Program: rm. 231, 4 pm; Affirmative Action meeting: rm. 236, 9 am; (Fri.), Closed. will reopen
for intersession. Inter-
Leonard Weinstein - acoustic guitar: Rainy Night House, 9 pm. during intersession.
UNION STATION DELI session, 11 AM- 3 PM. Now only 350 Reg. 600 "s
Hours: Mon. to Sun., 11 AM -
12 AM. limit 2 per person
while supplies last. 11 /4/82 - 11/ o/82
(Qg~- - i -^^ _____~ ~
- - ~ -~ - _
-=- I ~ - U -i, - - -I up--i
r riaTnT
U
e IOL S SwTIA i
L , ~* HERLTH
H L I
I /IOLSON'S ON TAP1 I
I s'-J - I^^o u
a.m.-1 a.m.
|Sat.; 11
l Sat. 1-1am-1 a1 *. -in/I *-
SUSB ID 1Required (&
I L)
82 '....7..MIT
~l P,ONEPERCUSTOME.R-Ol.ER
ON p U r-ii
IU.p
a glll I A -.. a-a f &
IIR-OI#FER
I IUIO *I
I Expires 11/11/82 i One Coupon per Customer Isun. 11 a.m.-Mid. = J,,o,...... 1 '-" ('4 ( 1)i liI LuUPON-EX l1t1-1-8Z
page 7
ember 4, 1982
page 6 The Stony Brook Pressmmmmmmmmm
Press m mmm mm * No0 irember 4, 1982 page 7
m
751-5549 751-5549
12" 16"
$3.50 $5.00
We Serve Beer and Wine
Full Line of Hot Heroes and Dinners
w Specializing in Datsun, Toyota, V.W. I "The Station pizza is a very thick pizza, with the
cheese
floating on top ... at $5.40 it is almost two dollars cheaper
than its main competitor." - The Stony Brook
Press
immmMMull Coupon mm mmmm
i*FREE COKE*
Qi R«
B - i -.
Is
* uy •u l
,yurge pizza with at least one item, U
get 4 FRE 12 oz. Coke's JustAskI
SFAST. FREE DELIVERY RIGHT TO YOUR DOOR
U0 eoon0;o M ?Expires-ý 11/9/82
-r ~9 1 ~1 Ir ''~'=-~' I i · · , · __ ~- 1 I I~- L rlr. ILOI LI "- ' ~II
- -- L ,_ -.- L II C _I IN
page 8 The Stony Brook Press
Mil
Dan Devasta tes Dan cers get up, and if you're lucky enough show, Dan rides a motorcycle, plays
by Joe Masset
My feelings toward club DJ's to pair up with someone who's got the drums, changes hats and faces
are mixed, ranging from annoyance some endurance, you won't sit by the minute, dresses like a
to contempt. I've encountered a down again. You also might find chicken, you name it. This gives
few swift ones, but not many - it hard to walk the next day. you something to watch while
it seems that most of them are The music Dan plays is still you're dying of exhaustion. The
drab types in ties who always seem pretty standard stuff, ranging from light show is run by Dan's side-
to play what you'd least like to the banality of Disco (for all you kick Deviation Dan, who uses an
hear. They show their involvement banal types out there) to some interesting sort of keyboard con-
with the music by bobbing their good but unexceptional New Wave trol board to flash the ever-present
heads like those dogs people used (you know the list - Police, Soft strobelights and mirror ball. Dan 2
to put in the rear windows of their Cell, Human League - I can't keeps the lights moving as fast as
cars. Make a request? Good luck. believe that there are still people the music.
Most DJ's play it pretty safe. out there who aren't sick of "Don't Last Wednesday's show was de-
"Piss on the Wall"? What's that? You Want Me"). I still danced to it
layed, which meant the audience
Wouldn't you rather hear "Gloria", though, and had more fun than I've
had to spend about half an hour
kid? had in months. Or weeks, anyway.
listening to a loop tape of ,Devas-
But then there's Devastation He does throw a few wrenches into
tation Dan promos, while E.O.B.
Dan, a DJ show that roars into the the DJ standard, like Geils (but not
sold a lot of beer. But the show
End of the Bridge and out again "Piss on the Wall") and (Wow!) eventually did start, and went on
every Wednesday night, leaving a Karla DeVito, and I hear he'll
longer than I could, so who am I
gaping hole in the wall. Devas- honor a request without you having to talk?
tation Dan's show is a screwy, to threaten him. My gripe is
Devastation Dan is a catalyst -
energetic goulash of music, magic basically that of missing favorites -
he gets you and your friends up
tricks, pyrotechnics, and dance- for example, where's Thorogood?
and bounces them around like
floor savvy. Mr. Dan himself is Or Ian Hunter? Or Chaz Jankel?
pinballs. If that's your gang's idea
a frenetic little character who Or Zappa? This guy should make
of a good time (and why the hell
scrambles around, the booth and his programming as varied as the shouldn't it be?), gather 'em up
dance floor like Denny Terrio on rest of his show. and take 'em down to catch the
speed. His enviable lack of inhi- The show is what separates wildest DJ show in this or any
bitions make you feel like a jerk Devastation Dan from less enter-
prising Disk Jockeys. During his universe.
if you're sitting in your seat, so you
November 4, 1982 page 9
I
w _w I ·IK L
AA*A**AAA*AAA ~·i91
VOLKSWAOEN OWNERS )1
* .
A. A. .. .
)I
SNovemb Iier's of
129 Hollock Ave. Re. 25A Port Jeenon Sta. Bridge the,
Tue.-Sot. 928019 8 oam.-6:30 p.m.
Bridgel
~ L*cN.
111m
1 " PARIIS.
Mr
3PML
M1w SKick off your week here!
REPLACE FRONT $19 95
BRAKE PADS
ANY Foreign Car
9 : Monday's Madness
SR - - _ EG
_ _$29.50
_ _.
BUT,
,-5'B5UMPER COMPLETE All You C an Drink
ALL INCLUSIVE $79.95 : Bar Drinks * Tap Beer
STun- upo
C choe
VIave Adpustmenw-
4 CYL.ONLY $5. 00
FoIts 1 eptacd Twre Pressure Servced Bte"ry Watot S9-12 p.m.
SSerwvce Lubrcton -mnckudes all movng parts own to do(x
'*" PLUS MUCH MORE
C--------- --------
SUFFLER.98 Tuesday, Nov. 9th
I Pa* &abo RABBIT $49.95
Live music with Spectrum
Meal CareIs Accepted
ITUNE-UPS o $19.65
The End of the Bridlge, 2nd floor Union
mMcPHEARSON $79 9 246-55139
I STRUTS 9 .95 0
-...
go-
A •_L_
a
A AA A- A A
m Mr.KKW
. A
AMAAA& A&AL AAAA I
pr 'P ---
~l~----~-r Irr mmI I
st _I _ _II[ 1..L__ I I I · -__ _ _ I~LL L I .1 _· · I I I ill I i i I i I
Come to
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
for Prayer, Praise, Worship
African Student Organization and Bible Teaching.
Meeting: Stage XII Cafeteria Meeting: Thursday
Nov. 11 at 10 p.m. Time: 7:30 p.m.
Place: Union 226
THE STONY BROOK
Stony Brook Drama Club AMATEUR RADIO CLUB
Proudly Presents will hold its first meeting on
THREE PLAYS Monday, Nov. 1 at 6:45 P.M.
in Union Room 223
- ELECTIONS WILL BE HELD
Three Short Plays
- Our budget and new radio station will be discussed
"Tangled Web" "Man vs. Furniture" "Birdbath" All Stony Brook studentsandfaculty are welcome to attend. If you
by D.S. Cooper by D.S. Cooper by Leonard Malfi desire to learnabout radio and communcations, orfeel like speaking
to people World- Wide, come on down Monday evening. No
previous knowledge is necessary. For more info, call Mr. Don Marx
Wed. thru Fri. November 17-19 at 8.00 p.m. at 246-3500.
Sat. November 20 at 3:00 p.m.
TALK TO THE WORLD
THEATRE THREE FINE ARTS CENTER from STONY BROOK'S AMATEUR RADIO STATION
Tickets available at the door $1.00 Donation
ATTENTION
Attention! ALL FANATICS INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING &
BUILDING OF SB1, A MICROCOMPUTER.
Are you interested in a French Poetry Contest? Le
THERE WILL BE A SPECIAL MEETING OF STONY
Cercle Francais is sponsoring one to be held December
2nd. Submit all entries to the French/Italian Dept BROOK COMPUTER SCIENCE SOCIETY, FRIDAY,
NOV. 5 AT 4 P.M., ROOM 1223, LAB OFFICE
Interested in a spring break trip to Canada? We're
going and if you're simply interested in finding out what
BUILDING.
we're all about, we're having a general meeting this Friday ALL INTERESTED MUST ATTEND!!
at 3:30. library room 4006
BIENVENUE The Stony Brook Gospel Choir
presents
Gabriel Without
Frontiers
by Bob Goldsmith unreleased "John Has a Headache"
3000 plus monkeys came to don't quite come up to stuff.
see Peter Gabriel in the Stony Like an essay which contains
Brook Gym on Saturday night. many facts but no connections
Not many were shocked. Quite or conclusions, many Gabriel tunes
a few were lulled to sleep and a have interesting components but
lot of others came to the show form unsatisfying wholes. Fas-
asleep and stayed that way the cinating subject matters, inviting
whole time. bits of percussion and tantalizing
Too bad Gabriel didn't try keyboards are all present but the
a little harder to inject some vita- languid pace and Gabriel's half-
lity into the hibernating horde. sing, half-holler vocals make the
It could have been done. The songs drag, sometimes unmerci-
crowd shwed s ns of lif •• fullv -o.
giving
tars a most unbospitable reac- not quite the sum total of this
tion. Not that the group was ex-soccer referee's output. The
so bad -- though they were a straightforward pop of, "Salisbury
bit short on melody and a trifle Hill" was the first sign that the
long on repetition, they compen- evening wouldn't be a total dis-
sated with dynamic rhythm and aster. "Shock the Monkey,"
boundless energy. Unfortunately, the current hit, and the exciting,
those are not the things that forceful polyrhythmic punch of
placate a couple of thousand "Kiss of Life" sparked the other-
burned-out Genesis fans. wise lackluster middle of the
Gabriel devoted two thirds performance. "Games Without
of his set to the slow, fragmented, Frontiers" and "I Don't Remem-
African derived creations that com- ber" were well received but a
prise most of his newest album, little weak. Chalk this up to
SU..
r ra On any large 16" pizza.
Security. The frequently lengthy the fact that this is the first show Free Extra OOne coupon per pizza.
explanations that sometimes pre-
ceeded these songs helped in
of the tour. The highlight was
a glowing encore rendition of * Thick Expires:11/15/82
understanding their meanings which
were usually buried beneath layers
"On the Air," the only track
performed from Gabriel's second
SCrust!
Cr U St
Fast,
736 Rt 25-A
Free Delivery
of allegory. But one still has to and most consistent album. E Setauket
wonder about lines like these Mixed feelings are probably : .Telephone 751-5500
from "The Family and the Fish- the last thing a performer wants to
ing Net": "Suffocated by mirrors, leave an audience with but that's
stained by dreams/Her honey belly just what one got from Gabriel.
pulls the seams/Curves are stiff He has many interesting ideas,
upon the hinge/Pale zeros tinge motivations (particularly his inte-
the tiger skin/Moist as grass, ripe rest in things third world) and a
and heavy as the night/The sponge great deal of potential, as his * Iemmmmmmmm
is full, well out of sight/All around livelier moments emphasize. But
the conversations/Icing on the the main thrust of his new mate-
warm fresh cake." Just a shade rial is now geared towards the
heavy on pretension and a little disjointed dullness which too large
light on substance. Of course, a portion of the concert was mired
such things can be overlooked in. Gabriel must learn that it's
when the music is riveting enough not enough to just hit people
but songs like "Rhythm of the with his rhythm stick, he has to
Heat" from the new album or the make them enjoy it too.
II 1 ' -El C - r - ' r I I ' 1 Il I - ~-- - - ma I '' rl I I · -- L, I , _
·r-· ___ I· 111