4. Thursday, September 11, 1975 University Daily Kansan 求点 $A, B$ 的坐标,使 1. Dirt Band, rain energize Hoch By TIM BRADLEY With a thunderstorm passing through town and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band on stage at Hoch Auditorium, plenty of electricity was floating around Wednesday And a perfect evening it was. The audience was practically wall-to-wall whoopers and whistlers and enough perfume was in the air to choke a moose. The heat in hea. Auditorium could've made him so hot, but what is good music without sweat? Regional favorite Danny Cox began the concert by demonstrating his considerable technical prowess. Review Steve Baker, delivered a tasty eclectic set, touching on folk, reggae, sax and blues. Cox possesses the searing, soaring ability to move from ska to latino, sattoo and extremely low without bottoming. He can fly to a near-yodel and plunge defy it to a whisper without faltering. The falling is not hard. A real people-pleaser was the tune "Jelly" because so suggestive it could've burned a parchment. After a毛谨-deresed curtain call for Cox, the who-put-the-bompin' foot-stompin' Before even a single note was played, the Nittle Gritty Dirt Band received a standing ovation. The band launched into a frantic set that had the audience jumping up and down like pistons. John McEuen could fail the feathers off a pleasant with that banjo of his and Jeff Hanna's guitar playing gave me a case of the old slack-jawed jeebles. Fewer go Army Area U.S. Army recruiters said yesterday that enlistments in Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City were down in August, apparently reflecting the national drop-off. The Army announced Tuesday that it had suffered an 13.9 per cent deficit nationwide in meeting its quota for August. The Army signed up 15,434 men and women but it wanted 18,900. It was the A.m.'s first major month shortage since July, 1973. Sergeant David Buff, an Army recruiting officer in Lawrence, said new standards were the major reason for the August decline in enlistees. Sergeant Virgil Patterson, an Army recruiting officer in Topeka, said that when qualifications were raised it became harder to get people of high quality. McEuen also played fiddle, guitar, guitar and bass, while Jimmy Fadden tripled as guitarist, harpist and drummer. Jim Ibombo played bass and piano and was a major contributor to harmonies that sparkled like club soda. The Nity Grity Dirt Bard projects an aura that puts them comfortably between the city and the country, sort of a "city-country" duo for the "Cosmic Cowboys." Their music runs the gamut from Cajon bees to bluegrass to rock-n'roll. John McEuen's solo band even included what would have to be called the Ramones, with even more tickets brought Tarras and Albens to mind. The Nity Gritts spotlighted some old things, some new things, some borrowed and some blues. The audience was on its feet for "Jambalaya," Diggy Gigg LY" and "Electric Jumpers," a freshly released album, "Dream," on United Artists Records, the Dirt Band performed the title track, a line penned by Bordeaux Bryant in 1958 for the Everley Brothers, as well as Jimmy Fadden's mother, and J. D. Souther's "Mother of Love." Let me pause to pick a nit or two. The otherwise perfect concert was blemished by a small logical problem. There must be an omnipotent force that is welder a feeling of omnipotence, as though the torch was a sleeper. It's a mansuice to be involved in the music only to have some overzealous usher shooting off his flashlight an estral firefly at a delinquent smoker. Anyway, it's a rare band that can combine consummate musicianship with thumbs-up exuberance, and SUA and Cowtown Productions should get five stars for bringing just this kind of band to Lawrence. Ticket subsidies A good time was had by all. Rolfs said in the memo be thought the suit was justified and asked the committee to come up with at least two alternatives to the present by-laws. From page 1 board seat because he was a white male. --will oversee and allocate funds to intramurals and clubs sports. Shapira asked the committee to consider its possibilities and submit them at the next meeting. THE COMMITTEE approved a series of three bills creating a Recreation Advisory Council. The present Intramural Board will be a sub-committee of the new board, Shapiro The committee favorably recommended a Senate resolution calling for intramural games to be open to the public to "what whatever extent possible and regardless of how little" even though some committee members complained the resolution was silly. They said it was silly because the intramural Board had already been asked to I give good thanks that last by day. look into it and the resolution really didn't do anything. Sahiro said the resolution gave the board something concrete to point to. Besides, he said, if the committee voted against it if the committee thought they wanted the games closed. Shapiro also discussed the Promotions Sub-committee's plans for a per capita rally the day before. Preliminary plans include a concert, a celebration for (the benefit) and 50 kgs of beer. "REMEMBER HOW GOOD" Hamburgers Used to Taste? "ZAP" They still do at Moore Burger 1511 W.6th Join the K.U. Football Wives Support the Jayhawks by Buying a Big Blue Hat *2 will be contributed to the athletic scholarship program (Williams Educational Fund) for each hat sold (or purchased) THANKS for kicking-off the new football season . . . with your purchase of season tickets, STUDENTS! THE STUDENT SEATING BOARD THE STUDENT SPORTS COMMITTEE THE KU ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT, SEE YOU IN MEMORIAL STADIUM SATURDAY FOR THE FUN AND EXCITEMENT OF JAYHAWK FOOTBALL ADMISSION AT THE STADIUM ADMISSION AT THE STADIUM REQUIRES STUDENT SEASON TICKET AND YOUR VALIDATED CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL IS UNLAWFUL ON STADIUM GROUNDS FOOD, DRINK, OR ICE CHEST CONTAINERS ARE NOT PERMITTED INSIDE STADIUM ---