Page 6 College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 27, 1971 THE BATTAlia ROBERT HALSELL TRAVEL SERVICE AIRLINE SCHEDULE INFORMATION FARES AND TICKETS DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL ■ ■■■■ CUR Imm. CALL 822-3737 1016 Texas Avenue ■*— Bryan ‘Promises, Promises’ here Sunday In A Return Engagement, TAMU ARTIST SHOWCASE Presents . . . ROBERT GUTHRIE, Classical Guitarist This Former Aggie Will Be Featured In The MSC Ballroom, 8:00 p. m. Wednesday, November 10, 1971 Town Hall Season Tickets and Activity Card Holders Admitted Free. No Reserved Seats. A&M Student Date $1.00 Faculty, Staff, Patron $3.00 Other Students $1.50 Tickets & Information MSC Student Program Office 845-4671 The vastly successful Broadway musical “Promises, Promises” goes before Bryan and College Station audiences Sunday in a two-performance stand at the Bryan Civic Auditorium. Appearing under TAMU Spe cial Attraction and Rotary Com munity Series billing, the David Merrick production with. Theatre Now will appear in national tour ing company format directed by Robert Moore, director of the original Broadway production. Will Mackenzie will appear in the lead as the meek but eager and confused young man in a huge corporation. Blocked in his attentions to the pretty girl who runs the office’s restaurant and in his ambitions to rise to exec utive status, he finds the way to open doors of advancement. It’s the key to his bachelor apartment, coveted by philander ing executives of the firm. “Promises, Promises” has sev eral things going. Merrick pro duced the Broadway original, along with “Hello, Dolly” and 50 others. Author of the book is Neil Si mon, stage-comedy writing champ with ten hits in ten years, from “Barefoot in the Park” through “The Odd Couple” to “Plaza Suite.” “Promises” is the first Broad way musical with songs by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, ac claimed in films and records be fore they approached the stage. They won 1969 Academy Awards, one for the whole score of “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” and the other for the movie’s song, “Raindrops Keep Failin’ On My Head.” “What’s New, Pussycat?” “Al- fie” and “The Look of Love,” theme of the James Bond flick “Casino Royale,” were Oscar nominees the three previous years. Stage invention by Bacharach and David in “Promises” also gives it importance. If there is such a thing as pop-opera, they invented it in the modern pop mu sic for the show. Soprano voices are part of the orchestration. “Promises” is based on the 1960 Academy Award winning film “The Apartment,” by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond. With Mackenzie are Sy4 Balaber as the girl of his drj Chanmng Chase as the inebrk girl he picked up at his lo ne |J moment, Mace Barrett Bloom and Tom Boyd. The show includes oil dance numbers as staged by ] chael Bennett. “Promises, Promises” appi here in the 2:30 p.m. matinee J formance as a TAMU Special A traction, for which all admisi are by separate ticket. The Rota'I Series performance will be at! I p.m. All seats are reserved. Laird trying for European arms reduction BRUSSELS, Belgium ) — Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird tried Tuesday to line up the Western allies for a joint approach to Moscow on reduc ing armed forces in Europe. Laird conferred with Lord Carrington of Britain, Mario Tanassi of Italy and Helmut Schmidt of West Germany. Earlier he collaborated with Schmidt in presenting to the Nuclear Planning Group — NPG — of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization a picture of what might happen if the Soviets made a major attack on southern Germany and the allies met it with a battlefield nuclear wea pon. Of the 15 members of the al liance, all but France agreed Oct. 6 to send an “explorer” to Mos cow to sound out the possibilities of mutual, balanced force reduc tions. He is Manlio Brosio, the Italian who until September was the secretary-general of NATO. Brosio is expected to make his first trip to the Soviet Union be fore mid-November. But he does not have a com mon allied position to present to the Kremlin. Italy was worried — along with Greece and Tur key — that an agreement to cut forces in Germany would lead IADIES, HAVE YOU HEARD? There’s Going To Be A Party At The Holiday Health SPA Open To The Public. FREE Exercising • Refreshments • Prizes Programs For Everyone You can win a membership to the salon or valuable prizes. Also, guest speaker, author of meadows diet book. Come One Come All ! ! —FREE BABYSITTING— This is just some of the equipment available for your use at the SPA. These qualified instructors will help work out a program especially for you. holiday health* 3008 E. 29th. 822-1529 ( 2 BLOCKS EAST OF VILLA MARIA ROAD ) the Soviet Union to build up its forces already in the Mediter ranean area. An attempt was made to re assure the Mediterranean coun tries by an allied agreement that reductions made on the central European front should not dimin ish security on the flanks. This was also reached Oct. 6, but the concern persists. The United States and West Germany are pushing hardest for mutual force reductions, with some support from Britain. An informed source said the United States would be interested in an initial mutual cut of as much as 10 per cent, but official spokes-* men say it is too early to throw light on a figure. Birthday ball for Marines November 6 The first Bryan-College Sta tion Marine Corps Birthday Ball will be held at 7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 6, at the Ponderosa Motor Inn, announced local Marine rep-> resentatives. All Marines and former Ma rines in the community are in vited to attend the ball and help celebrate the Corps’ 196th birth day, noted Lane Stephenson, president of the local chapter of the Marine Corps Reserve Offi cers Association. MCROA is jointly sponsoring the program with the A&M chap ter of the Semper Fidelis Society and the local Marine Corps re cruiting office. Persons desiring to make res ervations for the ball should con tact Stephenson at 846-3846 or Staff Sgt. John Whitaker at 822-2822. Other European allies are more cautious because they are concerned that across-the-board cuts would be to the advantage of Moscow. Any U.S. forces with drawn would have to move back across the Atlantic while Soviet troops would retreat only a few hundred miles. Spokesmen say the discussions on force reduction have only an indirect connection with the busi ness of the Nuclear Planning Group, which ends its quarterly * meeting Wednesday. This ses sion brought together seven of the allies. Their meeting opened Tuesday with a presentation by Laird on the over-all nuclear sit uation, which is heavily influ enced by the strategic arms lim itation talks — SALT — between the United States and the So viet Union. The ministers then discussed with Laird and Schmidt the consequence of using nuclear battlefield weapons in a Eur opean conflict. Officials said it V ?*****%5 ^ 3 • i&f *■> ^ ' f >%a* J33t* v. >* • mm ■ SPLIT LEVEL LAWN MOWING is the ^taSTtaTSead- ing, Pa. park. These youths, with the Neighborhood Youth Corps, try to keep up with the grass on a former reservoir by mowing in relays. (AP Wirephoto) would take about two years iJ fore guidelines can be agreed J how to deal with these co»| quences. 0 OUR SPECIALTY 1/5 Carat Eye Clean Diamond For Senior Ring, $40 plus tax C. W. 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