Columns • Editorials • News Briefs fre Battalion Pag-e 2 Coillege Station, Texas Tuesday, March 22, 1966 • Opinions • Cartoons Features SMALL CROWD ATTENDS DEBUT cadet slouch by jim Earle Read Battalion Classifieds ‘Time Of Your Life 9 Cuts Revealing Slice Of Life BY LANI PRESSWOOD Battalion Amusements Editor Opening night crowds at pro ductions of the Aggie Players seldom threaten to violate exist ing fire regulations concerning the number of people allowed in a building at one time. Monday night’s sparse turnout for the opening of “The Time of Your Life” proved no exception. But if the traditional trend pre vails, the attendance figures will soon start picking up and should approach the boundaries of re spectability before the play ends its six-night run. Those who do come out can be guaranteed of seeing an unusual show, one which finds over twen ty people romping around the Guion Hall stage at one time or another. People that happened to be passing by the post office at North Gate Friday night were treated to a rare sight about one in the morning. It all started like this: A group of amateur musicians had been picking and singing over at Ralph’s Pizza when closing time came around. The boys were just getting warmed up and they didn’t feel like quitting. So, they simply moved over under the light in front of the P.O. and carried on their impromptu serenade to the delight of a number of late passersby. A banjo, guitar and kazoo pro vided most of the melody. An other student pulled on the broomstick atop an inverted wasHtub and managed to coax sounds strangely like a bass fid dle out of the one attached string. A large, roly - poly figure banged and shook up a storm on a tambourine. A tall, stringbean of a fellow danced with a rub board in his hands. The sounds were strange. The sounds were fresh. The sounds were bright. The sounds were melancholy. All the action takes place in a run-down San Francisco bar in 1939. The realistic set construct ed for the play under the super vision of director Robert Wenck is one of the production’s high lights. A real-live juke box, a pinball machine and row upon row of liquor bottles lend an air of authenticity to the imagina tive, colorful setting. “The Time of Your Life,” penned by William Saroyan, is a naturalistic, slice-of-life type drama. The audience is allowed to more or less peek in at a win dow to watch this strange assort ment of individuals briefly, and then, with few problems really solved, the shade is quietly drawn again. What has been seen is a suc cession of distinctive characters, even changed, but that didn’t bother anyone. If they didn’t know the words, they hummed along with the tune. The atmosphere of the moment was heady and bubbled like cham pagne, but the atmosphere above the post office was much, much heavier. First a few drops fell here and there as a warning. Then more and more. The singers and participants tried their best to ignore the falling rain, but it would not be ignored. A KK showed up in his patrol car, no doubt, to control the vast, uncontrollable mob of 25 students that would, no doubt, ruin our reputation of no academic non sense. However, all that remained were wet footprints on the black pavement, laughing voices in the air and a freshness that has not been felt in a long, long time on the campus of A&M. Say, what are you doing next Friday night? Tell you what, I’ll meet you in front of the North Gate post of fice, and don’t forget your rub board. a few far-fetched, but most taken straight from the broad avenue of life. This play, which won the ’39 Pulitzer Prize for drama, has to be called a funny-sad comedy. It’s a light-hearted show but there are several poignant mo ments and at various times some serious viewpoints on life and on living are expressed. The play throbs with humanity, with people, with life. Thus it is that the production’s chief defect is its lack of gusto. In spots the show really moves but it drags badly during the first act and never really manages to sustain the needed breezy tempo. Roger Williams does the best job of producing that intangible spark during his stint as a rau cous, middle-aged windbag with a cow-punching background. Getting excellent mileage out of a good role, Williams displays a deft sense of timing, a comic flair and the crucial element of vitality. Another performer whose ap pearances liven up the proceed ings is Bud Franks, who plays a young, dancer-comedian. Grace ful movement is Franks’ chief stage asset. Allan Pierce handles the lead ing role with skill, poise, and polish and seems to become more and more effective as the play runs its course. One of the play’s most diffi cult roles belongs to Marie Crook, who plays an emotionally tor mented streetwalker with feeling and sensitivity. The cast is too large to review individually but a list of other actors who turned in solid per formances would have to include Don Carter, Dick Gustafson, Steve Thurman, Paul Bleau, Tim Lane, and Kirk Stewart, among others. Jan Gannaway’s extreme street walking getup provides quite an eye-opener, as does a scene which finds Pierce and Gustafson cram ming their mouths full of chew ing gum, calmly talking all the while. And though some parts of the play don’t move well enough, the total effect is an enjoyable one. “The Time of Your Life” is no blockbuster but it does afford an evening of warm, pleasant enter tainment. Reynolds' It ap By Mike Reynolds The South rose again in Dixie. The grass was green, green. The Saints went marching in. Headlights of cars and the traf fic signal seemed to keep time with the music. The late night air was heavy with moisture and it stood in beads on black skin and white skin alike. Voices rose and fell, laughed and cried to gether. White teeth and bright eyes twinkled in the night. Autos began to stop. A crowd began to gather. Those who chose to stop and listen could not help smiling. They could not help clapping. They could not help singing along. There was no uniform. There was no civilian. There was no race, color, religion or other divi sion. The guitar was passed from hand to hand and each individual led the group in his favorite song. Some were popular, some folk tunes, some from south of the border. In some the language ATTENTION SENIORS All seniors who wish to enter a candidate for Van ity Fair need to turn in an application and a 5” x 7” picture or larger to the Stu dent Publication Office by March 23rd. Application can be picked up at the Student Publica tion Office. WRANGLER JEANS NOCONA BOOTS AMERICAN HATS MESQUITE PANTS at the BUNKHOUSE 1206 W. 25th Bryan 823-5782 Vote For Wallace T. Cowart For County Clerk Brazos County Class of ’49 TOeSPA'i — ‘Z z - 7 '.3o p.n “As the holder of th’ record for th’ most “Dear John” letters, I’m not sure marriage is a very immediate problem, but I’ll go with you!” PEANUTS VI 7H0U6HT I \ ( MAD A CLEAN iOJHITE HANDKERCHIEF, V IN HERE... J PEANUTS There's a bide one... a 6REEN ONE ..ANOTHER BLUE ONE... A PEANUT BUTTER SANDWICH IS JUST THE SANDWICH TO BE EATIN6 (JHEN VOU'RE LOOKING ACROSS THE PLAYGROUND AT A LITTLE RED-HAIRED GIRL HtJU ADMIRE, BUT KNOW MOO HAVEN'T A CHANCE OF EVER MEETING AGGIES FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT ! ! ★ Food . . . Deliciously Prepared ★ Broiler Burgers Supreme ★ Old Fashioned Ice Cream Parlor ★ Soft Background Music FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE !! ★ Open Until 1:30 a. m ★ Seating Capacity For 88 ★ East Gate — Hwy. 6 • Meet Your Buddies Here ★ Bring Your Books Along ★ Treat Your Dates OPEN UNTIL 1:30 A. M. Dutch Treat East Gate — Hwy. 6 — Across From Golf Course uJhat in the world happened TO MV WHITE HANDKERCHIEF ? UlHV 15 THAT? IF VOU HAVE TO A5K, VOU'LL NEVER UNDERSTAND! PROGRAMMERS TRW needs you. Centuries ago the thinking of Galileo, da Vinci, and Newton was thought heretic by many of their contemporaries. But, the test of time has seen such thoughts develop into the technologies of today. Now, in recent time, computer applications through scientific programming have so accelerated the process of problem analysis that the thoughts of today have become the designs of tomorrow. At TRW, we have taken important strides in advancing technology through the use of computer applications. In Houston, adjacent to NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Center (the home of Apollo), and at Redondo Beach near Los Angeles International Airport, several hundred skilled TRW programmers are applying their brain-power to further advance the capabilities of computers and computer sciences. MATHEMATICIANS ENGINEERS PHYSICISTS THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the student writers only. 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