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The Seguin Gazette-Enterprise from Seguin, Texas • Page 7

Location:
Seguin, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

fl 8A Thursday. AuRUrt 1081 The Somiin GazeMe-Kntorprise Tnxos CO) Blue Bonnet Palace, Selma: Aug. Morning from to 1, Aug. 7 The Abbey from 9 to Aug. 8 Clifton Jansky from 9to2, Aug.

from 0 to I. Country Cabaret, Reguln: Aug. 7 The Rhythmnlrcs from 8 to 12, Aug. Khythmai VPS from I) to I. The Corral, Seguln: Aug.

fl The Drifters of Victoria from 8 to 12, Aug. 7 Texas from 8 to 12, 8 Morning from 9 to I. Red Bandana, Saloon, McQueeney: Aug. Bob's Bar it Grill from 8 to 12, Aug. 7 Texas Armadillo Band from 8to 12, Aug.

from 9 to 1. American Legion, Seguln: Aug. 8 Clnvcrlcaf Orchestra from 0 to I. Heidelberg Halle, New Braunfels: Aug. fl Texas Sunrise hand from 8 to 12, Aug.

7 The Velvctn from 1, Aug. 8 Conrad Pierce from to 1, AUK Moonlight Express from fi to 10. GrueneHall.Gruene: Aug. 7 Ace in the Hole, Aug. Gary P.

Nunn. Golden Spike Lounge, Holiday Inn, Seguln: Stormy appearing nightly except Sunday from 8 to 12 weekdays and to 1 weekends. Randy'i, San Antonio: Third World, Aug. the Ramones, Aug. 8.

Municipal Auditorium, Austin: Peter P'rampton, Aug. 17. Club Foot, Austin: the Rockats, Aug. Psychedelic Furs, Aug. GregKlhn Bank, Aug.

26. Paramount Theatre, Austin: The Pointer Sisters, Aug. 20; Peter Tosh, Aug. 9. Austin Opera House: The Ramones, Aug.

Icehouse, Aug. 16; The Pretenders, Sept. 15. Erwln Center, Univ. of Texas at Austin: The Kinks, Aug.

Emmylou Harris, Sept. 27; Frank Zappa, Oct. 15. Hill Country Arts Foundation, Ingrain: Workshops are slated for Aug. 3-15 with the topics to be "Drawing from Nature" taught by Philip Field, associate professor of art at Pan American University in Edinburg, and "Pottery" which will be taught by Robert G.

Harloif of Medina. Another workshop will be held Aug. 10-14 with Jerry Seagle of Austin teaching a workshop on acrylics. The class will be limited to 25 students. Clay McGaughy, San Antonio watercolorlst, will conduct a special "Weekend Watercolor Workshop" beginning Aug.

21 at 7 p.m. continuing through Aug. 23. Each week of the two-week workshops are independent. Students may register for one week or both.

Tuition is $60 per week for HCAF members and $70 for non-members. A $15 deposit will reserve places. More information may be obtained by calling (512) 367-5121. University of Texas Institute of Texan Cultures, San Antonio: The 10th annual Texas Folklife festival will be held Aug. 6-9.

The annual celebration of Texas' ethnic and pioneer heritage, will be held at the Institute on Hemis- Falr Plaza. Times for the various activities are 5 to 11 p.m. Aug. 6 and noon to 11 p.m. Aug.

7, 8 and 9. There will be a vast array of entertainment, crafts, music and food presented by more than 6,000 talented participants representing 32 different cultural and ethnic groups. Visitors can learn how to milk a goat, throw a pot, dance a polka, shear a sheep and make a tortilla. Performing will be fiery Span ish flamenco, Lebanese folk dances, the Czech bescda or Indian tribal dances. There will be foods including Alsatian sandwiches, Jewish bagels, Wedish noodles, Greek pastries, soul food, Cajun gumbo, Chinese egg rolls and more.

The Church Theatre, San Antonio: Registration for theatre classes in acting and make-up being held at the Church theatre from Aug. 10-28 will be held at the theatre between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. starting Aug. 5.

Class fee is $65 for each course. $30 is payable at the time of registration and the balance at the first class session. LaGuna Gloria Art Museum, Austin: A major survey of desert-influenced art, "Artists in the American Desert," will be on view from July 10 through Aug. 23. The exhibit examines the importance of the desert as a subject and source of creative imagination for 29th century American artists.

Spanning a period of 60 years, from 1920 to 1980, this major survey includes the work of 25 artists who have drawn inspiration from the arid and semi-arid desert lands of the western U.S. Included in the exhibition are works by John Sloan, Marsden Hartley, John Marin, Stuart Davis, Georgia O'Keeffe, Agnes Martin, Helen Frankenthaler, Michale Heizer, Nancy Holt, Connie Zehr, and others. Laguna Gloria at First Federal, Austin: The Art Museum announces the summer exhibition of the Texas Fine Arts Association, on view July 2-Aus. 6. This year's exhibition features 33 Texas artists, including Iti from Austin.

The works selected by guest juror David Ryan, director of the Ft. Worth Art Museum will travel in upcoming months to cities throughout Texas under the auspices of the TFAA. Weekday show hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Salado Art Fair: For the 15th year, artists and art-lovers from across Texas will gather in Salado on Aug.

8 and 9 for the village's annual art fair. More than 200 artists selected from more than 400 applicants are expected to take part in the fair, offering for sale works including oil paintings, 'acrylics, watercolors, pen and ink drawings, needlecraft, macrame, woven articles, metal sculpture, pottery, woodcraft, kaleidoscopes, wind chimes, jewelry, seashell creations, photography, leather craft and stained glass. The fair will be open from 10a.m. to 8p.m. Saturday and 10 am.

to 6 p.m. Sunday The fair is held in Pace Park, located along Salado Creek. TeiM riaywrifbU Co. Theatre, Gruene: The wild days of the Texas frontier come to life again with for Texas," which will be presented in the Garden Theatre in Gruene ShootisU, Gamblers, saloon girls and cowboys relive life and times in Texas between the years of 1850 and 1890, the most colorful period in Texas history when John Wesley Hardin, Judge Boy Bean, Belle Starr, Carrie Nation, Sam Bass, Ben Thompson, Bass Outlaw, the legendary Texas Rangers and others like them dramatically burned their own personal brands on the pages of Texas heritage The play will be presented Thursday through Sunday nights through Sept. 6.

More information may be obtained by calling 825-0561. The Church Theatre. SM ABlonio Performances of Mol- liere's "The Imaginary Invalid" will be held each Thursday through Sunday during the entire month of August and will end on Sept 6 "The Imaginary Invalid" is a wonderful comic romp of mis fired romantic- revels and a great spoof on those pretending to be sick as well as the learned, but bumbling, doctors of the nth cen tury JJ. bids farewell, locals Dan Del Santo's unending blend of jazz, blues and tropical rhythms at Austin's Waterloo Ice House last week made me miss Texas already. There's every type of music one could ever want in this area, but I need to move to Michigan, raise my daughter and start anew on things.

Writing this column for five and a half years has been mostly a blast (what's that 280 different articles used for bird cage liners all over this great When I first started, there weren't many national or rock'n'roll pieces in the Gazette, so I'm glad the powers that were let me proceed. I have so much to thank many people for, and occasionally some of those names have popped up in Discscape. The only things I won't miss have to do with the "my music vs. their music" syndrome plaguing San Antonio, and somethingelsc. At a local business 1 worked in, it was saddening todiscover that a customer I'd long enjoyed waiting on was a racist.

Happily, this didn't happen too often, and if you go into that store at the right wee hour, the stockers may have on some totally crazed music. Oh, I'm also not gonna miss the people who think they're calling Salazar's Grocery because they can't dial straight and ask me about items! Seguin, you've been good to me and I appreciate it. Thanks likewise to Mr. Walshak and Mr. Wilson at KCTI radio in (ionzales for hiring me part-time last year when only my friends believed in me; to, Bruce and Joe, for keeping their music so positively vital; to Kathy thank you not only for always being there, but for being you.

Here are some readers album faves. In case you didn't hear, it was mentioned in print a few weeks ago. They picked three (usually! LPs, with label and year in parenthesis. Take care. LANA DAVIS: Ian Hunter- Welcome to the Club (Chrysalis, 1980); Rickie Lee Jones (Warner 1979), the Kinks One For the Road (Arista, 1980).

STACY MARK: Black Sabbath Paranoid (Warner 1971); Rush 2112 (Mercury, 1975); Judas Priest Unleashed in the East (Columbia, 1979). JIM KING: Bob Dylan Blonde on Blonde (Columbia, 1966); Jimi Hendrix Electric Ladyland (Reprise, 1968); Jerry Lee Lewis Fan Club Choice (Mercury, English, 1973). JJ. Syrja SAUL CASTELLANOS, Billy Joel The Stranger (Columbia. 19771; Elton John Tumbleweed Connection (MCA, 197D; Steely Dan -Aja (MCA, 1977).

RACHEL FLINT: Back in Black (Atlantic, 1980); Eagles Greatest Hits (Asylum, 1976); REO Speedwagon Hi Infidelity (Columbia, 1980). TOM DRISCOLL: Rush 2112 (Mercury, 1975), Bruce Springsteen The River (Columbia, 1980); Triumph (Attic, Canadian, 1977). BILL SCHROEDER The Beatles (White Album) (Capitol, 1968); Waylon Jennings Honky Tonk Heroes (RCA, 1973); the Who Tommy (MCA, 1969). BARBARA BARTH: Joni Mitchell Court and Spark (Asylum, 1974); Rolling Stones Let it Bleed (London, 1969); Neil Young Everybody Knows This is Nowhere (Reprise, 1969). MICAHANKINS: Blondie Parallel Lines (Chrysalis, 1978); Cheap Trick Heaven Tonight (Epic, 1978); Rocky Horror Picture Show Soundtrack 1978).

JON MORSE. Christopher Cross (Warner 1979); Cat Stevens Tea for the Tillerman 1970); Gino Vanelli A Pauper in Paradise 1977). KATHY MUELKER: Jackson Brown Hold Out (Asylum, 1980); Bruce Springsteen the River (Columbia, 1980); James Taylor's Greatest Hits (Warner 1976). RONNIE DANNELLEY: The Beatles Abbey Road (Apple, 1969); Van Halen (Warner 1978); the Who Who'sNextiMCA, 1971). BILL JIM KLINGEMANN: The Beach Boys Endless Summer (Capitol, 1974); Chuck Berry's Golden Decade (Chess, 1966); Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young Four Way Street (Atlantic, 1971).

M'LINDA JOHNSON: Christopher Cross (Warner 1979); Neil Diamond The Jazz Singer soundtrack (Capitol, 1980); Eagles Greatest Hits (Asylum, 1976). JAMES MATA. Christopher Cross (Warner 1979); Eagles The Long Run (Asylum, 1979); The Police Zenyatta Mondotta 1980). LIZ POEHLMANN: Carole King Tapestry (Ode, 1971); James Taylor Sweet Baby James (Warner THE AUTHOR: Nick Drake Bryter Layter (Island, English, 1969); Little Richard's Grooviest 17 Original Hits (Specialty, 1958); Pretenders (Sire, 1980). GEORGE DAESCHNER: It's a Beautiful Day (Columbia, 1969); Peter Gabriel (Atlantic, 1978); Bruce Springsteen the Wild, the Innocent, the Street Shuffle (Columbia, 1973).

MIKE ORTEGA: Joy Divi- sion Closer (Factus VI, 1981), The (CBS, 1980); Public Image Limited Second Edition (Warner I960). DANCE Saturday, Aug. 8th 9 til 1 'Cloverleaf AMERICAN LEGION For reservations 372-1079 Viewers watch Friday, August 7th 9-1 THE ABBEY Saturday, August 8th 9-2 CLIFTON JANSKY Thursday, August 13th 9-1 MORNING NEW YORK (AP) The wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer dominated the original TV network programming in the week ending Aug. 2, but only one of five pre-and post- wedding specials was broadcast by CBS winner in tho'weekly ratings race. That show, "The Royal Wedding," placed 17th among 63 shows broadcast in the week, behind ABC's preview program, in 13th place, figures from the A.C.

Nielsen Co. showed Tuesday. CBS instead listed four repeats among the week's 10 highest-rated shows, including a rerun of "The Jeffersons" in first place, and won the three- way race with an average rating of 14.5 to 13.6 for ABC and 12.2 for NBC. The networks say that means in an average prime- time minute during the week, 14.5 percent of the nation's TV- equipped homes were tuned to CBS. It was the llth straight week for CBS as the No.

1 network in prime time. NBC, meanwhile, continued on a streak of its own, now at eight consecutive weeks in third place. ABC's "20-20" was the only first-run program among the week's 10 top-rated, No. 2, and CBS had just one other first- run show among the 63 surveyed for the week "Walter Cronkite's Universe" in 53rd place. Of the other wedding specials offered by the networks, NBC's post-wedding show was No.

24, and the same network's preview 28th. ABC's wedding review was No. 40. The rating for "The Jeffersons" was 19.7. Nielsen says that means of all the country's homes with television, 19.7 percent saw at least part of the CBS program.

NBC had three of the week's five lowest-rated programs. "Eight is Enough" on ABC was No. 59, followed by three NBC shows, "B.J. and the Bear," "Games People Play" and "Robert Klein Special," Emmy nominees to be announced with ABC's "Those Amazing Animals" No. 63.

Here are the week's 10 highest-rated programs: "The Jeffersons," with a rating of 19.7 representing 15.7 million homes, CBS; "20-20," 18.9 or 15.1 million, and "Hart to Hart," 18.7 or 14.9 million, both ABC; "60 Minutes," 18.6 or 14.8 milliion, CBS; "Three's Company," 18.4 or 14.7 million, ABC; "Trapper John, M.D.," CBS, and "Facts of Life," NBC, both 18.3 or 14.6 million; "M-A-S-H," CBS, and "It'sa Living," ABC, both 18.2 or 14.5 million, and "Diff'rent Strokes," 18 or 14.4 million, NBC. The next 10 shows: "Alice" and "Lou Grant," both CBS; Royal Wedding Preview, ABC; "House Calls," CBS; Ives," NBC, and "Taxi," ABC, tie; "The Royal Wed- jUDBUDUJti SALOOH Aug. 68-12 JOE BOB'S BAR GRILL Aug. 7 8-12 TEXAS ARMADILLO BAND ding," A Love Story," and "Dukes of Hazzard," all CBS, and "CHiPs," NBC. Country Cabaret 839 FM 467 Seguin, Texas Friday, August 7 8-12 The Rhythmaires Saturday, August 8 9-1 The Rhythmaires LOS ANGELES (AP) Nominations for the 33rd annual Emmy awards were being announced today, with a large share expected to go to "Playing For Time," "Masada" and "East of Eden." Acting nominations seem certain to go to Peter Strauss for his roles in ABC's "Masada" and "A Whale for the Killing," Peter OToole for "Masada," Vanessa Redgrave for CBS's "Playing for Time" and Jane Seymour for ABC's "East of Eden." The nominations were to be announced at a news conference at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium, where CBS will telecast the awards presentation on Sunday, Sept.

13. Six stars representing the three major networks were to make the announcements. Up to five nominees and ties in each category will be selected. The winners will be judged by blue ribbon panels of peers on the weekend of Aug. 22-23.

The winners will be announced at the telecast or at the creative crafts awards banquet the Saturday evening preceding the ceremonies. The Sunday telecast will be followed by the Governors Ball at the Century Plaza Hotel. Aug. 8 9-1 SMITH Rock Country Music 1st appearance In Guadalupe County! 1 Open at noon 7 days a i 'week. Happy Hour 12-8' I BEAUTIFUL DOWITOWI MC gUEENEV Seguin, Texas BEER-SET UPS-POOL Aug.

6 8-12 OF- VICTORIA Aug. 78-12 TEXAS Aug. 8 9-1 MORNING Seafood, Steaks? Prime Rib At Gruene, in New Braunfels, Texas daily at IMM). Suntluy nl HIMIII. Dinner (il ft.10.

und TiiNlintf Koom (512) 629-2351 Dinner Entrees from 4.95 Deep Fried Gulf Shrimp Broiled Scallops Rainbow Trout Almondine Shrimp Scampi Lobster Tail Alaskan King Crab Cold Shrimp Peel Hawaiian Chicken Italian Spaghetti Rib Eye Steak Pepper Steak Prime Rib New York Strip Soups The Original New England Clam Chowder Chilled Gazpacho Salads FRESH SPINACH SALAD CHEFS' SUPREME SHRIMP SALAD Desserts New York Style Cheesecake Deep Dish Hot Apple Pie Served with a thick slice of Cheddar cheese Fresh Strawberries in heavy cream Homemade Chocolate Mousse Halle (Formerly El Conquistador) 1H 35 Mew Braunfels LADIES FREE! Plus Free Wine Coolers. EVERY THURSDAY! Music by TEXAS SUNRISE BAND FEATURING Jimmv Harriss and Other Former Members ot The Johnny Bush Frenchie Burke Bands 8-12 PM Doors Open 7 o'clock DANCE Friday, August? 8 TO 12 TEXAS SUNSHINE BAND Featuring former members of Johnny Bush and Frenchie Burke bands. Admission $2.50 Room Bar KG HALL Acrow From SUwcke Park" Thursday Night Augusts, 8-12 P.M. JOE BOB'S BAR GRILL Final Appearance in 1981! Happy Hour for Ladies $1 drinks RED BANDANA Fri. August? t-IAM THE VELVETS iHrllwtji 1 Beautiful Uowllluwri McUuccucy Moil! Sat.

August I MAM. NASHVILLE RECORDING STAR CONRAD PIERCE Sings "BacK on Mv Mind Arjain There'll Always Be Honky Tonks and other Great Hits He Has Writlen Sun. August 9 THE BIO BAND SOUND OF MOONLIGHT EXPRESS UUMl Drinks. Sod Ofnks i For HfMTUtiOM, OH I1MHW.

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About The Seguin Gazette-Enterprise Archive

Pages Available:
126,503
Years Available:
1960-1999