Monday, October 22, 1934 Daily Ncbraokan Pago 9 i i it e 'extremely5 low attendance, IOCS' Starship performance playful fresh By Kevin Du;;sa Diiy Ncbr taa Si&fr Eeporter Rock 'n' roll may never die, but the extremely low turnout of fans at Pershing Auditorium on Fri day surely didn't help much to perpetuate the cause. Neverthe less, Billy Satellite and Jefferson Concert Review Starship cranked out the tunes for about 2,600 concert-goers. Starship press agent Nadine Condon said there had been no consistent pattern to ticket sales througout the tour. It wag up and down the whole time without rhyme or reason, she said. But the sparse attendence did not appear to diminish the two bands' desire to put on a good show. Their playful antics and casual interactions with one an other and with the audience high lighted the musical attraction. These did not appear to be two bands at the end of a three-month-long tour. Starship drummer Danny Bald win accompanied the Satellite band on two songs, and members of Billy Satellite joined m btar- edy at the concert. One young asking band members and road ship songs at one time or another man lost track of his girlfriend ies if they had seen his girl would during the night. who had a backstage pass. He have been comical had it not Grace Slick sounded better and said he wa3 worried because the been so real Oh well, rock'n'roll looked healthier than ever. girl was "really good looking." The does have its victims. 'Thief of Hearts' has mindless plot By Eoger Qdrin Daily Nebraska tsfl Reporter Steven Bauer stars in the movie Thief of Hearts" now playing at the Cinema I and II. He delivers a very solid performance in his debut as the next male sex object of the golden screen. .eview His role required sex appeal and a GQ wardrobe with lots of black in it. He gets to drive a van and a sports car. The van is his burglar-mobile. His character role, Scott Muller, requires that he burglarize homes of the rich to steal away expensive art and the family silver. His opening breaking-and-entering scene is convincing and even looks sort of fun. The technicalities of how he gets the goods down to his van without being seen by the neighbors must have been beyond Hollywood. It is obviously beyond the size of some of the stuff he has taken in the past Muller is a king of thieves. His average net profit is 100 grand per house. Now that we know that Muller is a single successful guy, we find out that his next problem is sex. His manager &rd low-Ufa friend Buddy helps him out and sets him up for an hour. Mailer's pity for the teen-age hooker is touch ing. He doesnt get involved with her, but he gives her enough money to buy a new dress, a nice one. His gesture, is better than nothing, right? Muller even rises above the cocaine crises of his pal Buddy. He doesnt get into drugs. As he tells his.friend Buddy, 'You're a great guy. Dent kill yourself on that." Once we know our hero isnt into teen-age. sex or drugs he starts to read "her diaries. "Her" is Micki Davis, cr "I-.!:chb" If you are her fantasy man. That is the kind of dissxies they are. Get the general idea? - Barbara Willises pteysMidd, a budding interior designer married ft) &S. I v km --h' J- - , i 5 Kevin DusnDc'ly Nebrsciun Sisiger Mickey Thomas cf the JefTcrec-a Stzm&lp Fridcy nigM at PersMag Asidltoriam. There was, however, one tras- presence of a guy running around written communication skills, their marriage of six years is less apt on the verbal level After reading f.iicki's fantasies, Muller literally runs into her at the supermarket. The scene is fun. Haagen-Das must have paid something to get the ice-cream feature. For that matter, so did the company that sells her hus- band's typewriter. Mickfs best line is when she tells Muller, "You seem to have a lot of time to go shopping." He hires her to decorate his industrial strength apartment a la "Flashdance." In the course of decorating his bedroom, her dreams come true. A later scene shows them shot on opposite ends of her studio. She is shot against 1 s3fe fo rN . . -v 1.11 ir . irin&mtrv'm"4-Ti? yrnHrTTrrrrrrrr I I I... l .vf r? ... 7 " n j L ( I n ""'"WisheclE, ) I n "Sl si i the skyline of the city, a part of the acceptable civilized world. He is filmed against nature's world. Their conflicting worlds of reason and passion seem doomed. If you want to know what happens, see the movie, "Thief of Hearts" could have been a film classic. It could have been another "Body Heat." It's not. Hollywood m giving us happy endings. I dont know why, maybe because it's an election year. If you want to see a lot of Steven Bauer, this movie is for you. If you like well-constructed scenes and good camera work, this movie is adequate. If you want a good plot or storyline, dont bother. There is nothing to worry about, it's mindless. I m r if 3 I 3 ' .' I t The second program of the Lin coln Friends of Chamber Music 1934-85 has had a change of date, according to Nelson Potter, the organization's president. The concert was to have been a performance by the Borodin Trio on Oct. 27. Because the cellist in the ensemble, YuliTurovsky, is ill, ..... V,- .r V L . r- !i ak w a . . rp. American i American ilzznt WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE A V.vi . i L PMflWl'JSlli f I ' IIIIIM WHwi J V- U t J Shorts the Borodin concert nas been re scheduled" for May. 11. There still are balance-cf-season tickets available for the remain ing four concerts onthe LFCM series. The tickets may be obtained by contacting the Sheldon Mem arial Art Gallery. Regular tickets for the balance of the season are $27, and for students $23. too rcaular meusCai ins. cers (fa m ml books. Though both have good