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Page 31 text:
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MICK JAGGER and The Rolling Stones delighted 75,000 fans at the ASU stadi- um on Dec. 13. Photo by Ray. -.--3-Nh! Y .xx TURNING IT ALL LOOSE, Loverboy appears with Journey on Nov. 11. The concert sold out in three days. Photo by Ray. A 1 ..' ' .' v' gl! ', Nt . e 4 gg 7, of lf.. EH fl suv Rock Concerts 27
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Page 30 text:
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W l3' Sell-out crowds applaud big-name bands throughout Phoenix area. By Lisa Bateman Rock concerts attracted thou- sands of people interested in a particular sound or a particular group of musicians. Concerts are exciting, said Junior Lynn Ray. I get there at least five hours before the gates even open. Seeing that special group up close makes the wait- ing all worthwhile. Performances were held at Compton Terrace in the grounds PM -t W ,. a 's ,. of Legend City in Tempe, and at the Memorial Coliseum in Phoe- nix. Tickets went on sale weeks or months in advance. Scalpers purchased tickets' in large quantities in the hope that the concert would be a sell out. Then, the tickets could be resold at an inflated price. Al- though illegal, the practice was frequent. General seating, meaning no. seats were reserved, required hours of waiting in long lines for people who wanted prime space. All the entertainment was not on stage. Balloons, frisbees, and glow- in-the-dark products, all kept the audience busy before the main event. Warm-up bands, relatively unknowns, performed their own songs to get the crowd ready and riled up for the major attraction. The major band usually stayed on between one to two hours, with encores. S.. tr S, , . N TOM PETTYAND HIS HEARTBREAK- PRECIOUS TIME WHS SPC!!! by the ERS appeared at the Coliseum on Sept. thousands that paid to see the Pat Ben- 17, Photg by Ray, atar concert. Photo by Ray. 26 Rock Concerts REO SPEED WAGON PACKED the turf in the open air arena at Compton Ter race in early May. Photo by Ray.
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Page 32 text:
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T0 THE INTRIGUE of students, the RU- FRUSTRATING, CHALLFNGING, addict- bik's cube turned everyone into a prob- ing asteroids video-game 1SP13.V9d111 H Va' lem solver. Photo by Kret. Cars . Camaro 2. Corvette 3. Porsche 4. Mazda RX7 5. 280-Z riety of places. Photo by Kret. Restaurants . Round Table 2. Pizza Hut 3. Garcias 4. Mc Donalds 5. Black Angus ---'Wi T.V. Movies 1. 'tMash 1. t'Arthur 2. uThree's Company 2. Stripes 3. Happy Daysn 3. Superman Il 4. H240-Robert 4. 'tHeavy Metal 5. Flamingo Roadu 5- Stir Crazy Songs Back in Black . Spirit of the Radio 3. Tom Sawyer 4. Running with the Devil 5. Urgent'l By Aileen Roush and Carol Kret Although some current campus fashions are new others are returning from earlier generations Girls were seen wearing knickers, which were as in as they were in the '30s. Another returning fashion was Bermuda shorts. applique symbolized the Izod clothing. In footwear topslders vans loafers iclcles moccasins closed toe heels and sneakers were popular Still at the height of fashion were designer jeans. Labels like Calvin Klein, Gloria Vanderbilt, Jordache, and Sasson were seen on the back- 'Preppy' - clean-cut, carefree - symbolizes today's fashion trends 28 Fashions, Fads, Favorites Preppy apparel is popular in to- day's fashions. Guys on campus got into the sophisticated, clean-cut look with a line of Izod clothing. Included were socks, belts, jackets, sweaters, and the ever-popular Izod shirts worn by both guys and girls. An alligator sides of females and males. With every new school year comes a list of new favorites. A survey taken in October indicated the most popular songs, TV shows, movies, restaurants, cars, and Video games.
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