Page 2 THE BATTALION College .Station, Texas Tuesday, November 21, 1972 CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle HAPPy tw/wksgiwng, drive ^epuu.y beat TUB Wt-KHO*HVMr OUT OF 'TOO-KHO'N VIM JAY’S SABER INN Package Store Come by and let us show you our selection of fine liquors and wines. Weekend specials every Friday and Saturday, We appreciate your business. Caines Open: Student Discount 10:00 a. m. to 9:00 p. m. Monday Thru Saturday 701 Texas Ave. at Saber Inn 846-7755 Ark.-Tecl j smu ‘^y CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION Each Tuesday, 5:30 p. m. Holy Eucharist and Supper EPISCOPAL STUDENT CENTER 904 - 906 Jersey Street (Southern Boundary of Campus) 846-1726 IMPORTED 3 & 10 SPEED BIKES Sales - Service - Accessories I FINALLY GOT ONE. Freshman split end Richard Osborne got his first touchdown catch of his colleg-e career against Rice Saturday. Osborne leads the Aggies in receptions with 29 but it took ten games before he got to score. It wasn’t enough however as the Owls beat the Aggies 20-14 Saturday. He’ll try it again in front of 80 million people Thursday when the Ags visit the Longhorns in a TV game. (Photo by Steve Ueckert) Food Services Announces Food Poll Results NEW SHIPMENT OF PEUGEOT Limited Supply $127.95 CENTRAL SUPPLY Houston- Last Week Season Re Percentage WA One day • le per Mi Resonance by Steve Grayson By JUDITH CRIST The Beachboys—sure everybody remembers the Beachboys. They were the cute guys with the surf er hair cuts and striped coats that sang about little deuce coups and good vibrations. “Beachboy music” came to be a description of the much-copied sound they made famous. With the sweet, high harmonies, cho ruses frequently consisting of sounds instead of words, and the eternal search for the perfect wave, their music was a part of the exuberance of the middle ( sixties. -Their first single, “Surfin’ Sa fari” came out in 1962: It made them the top vocal group in America. The next four years were tightly scheduled with a minimum of one single every three months, an album every six months, and a national tour every year. The Beachboys grew older and matured right along with the kids who bought their records — but their “Beachboys music” stayed the same. It was good for them fi nancially since a Beachboy single had a guaranteed market, but it couldn’t last forever. In 1966 “Pet Sounds” came out. Something was different. The voices were the same but the al bum had nothing to do with the perfect wave bit. “Pet Sounds” ended up in record bargain piles and it seemed the Beachboys were just sweet history. In early 1971 “Surfs Up” hit the rocks. It was the Beachboys, but with some music that was distant even from “Pet Sounds.” The title track of “Surfs Up” was a song first re corded in 1967. It was the only survivor of an abortive partner ship with Van Dyke Parks, a strange songish writer whose big gest accomplishment was doing the music for Ice Capades com mercials. But the song set the mood for the whole album and their new music in general. “Surfs up, aboard a tidal wave— Come about hard and join the Young and often Spring. I heard the word, wonderful thing. A children’s song, the child is the father of man.” Nostalgia had crept into their music understandably, and pleas antly. One of the tracks, “Disney Girl’s ’57” is the way everyone remembers his freshman year. Two other songs dealt with ecol ogy and one with demonstrations. “Surfs Up” was the emergence of a different Beachboys, and older, more serious group of men, but with the same knack for turning out sweet sounding music. Next week — Charles Manson and the Beachboys latest release. The Department of Food Serv ices has announced the results of the poll taken to decide student food preferences. The poll indicated student pref erences among the foods ordinar ily offered in fast food franchise operations. The first choice of students was pizza. Other choices were fried chick en and French fries, second- Pre-Registration To Begin Monday Pre-registration for the 1973 spring semester will begin Mon day and run through Dec. 1, ac cording to Don Carter, director of student registration. Students are to go to their pros pective departments to pick up registration packets and then to speak to his advisor. Registration headquarters will be in the Cushing Building, where students will turn in class re quests. Bills will be mailed to each student at his mailing address just prior to the Christmas holi days. Final exams will start on Wed nesday, Dec. 13 and run through Tuesday, Dec. 19. Students’ grades will be mailed by Dec. 21. The spring schedule booklet may be picked up in the Regis trar’s Office in the Coke Building. ranked; and cold sandwiches, grilled cheese and soup, third. Fourth choice was fish and (Continued from page 1) run. It will follow a course from the coliseum to Jersey Street, Texas Avenue, East Main Drive and past Krueger-Dunn Hall back to the coliseum. The Daily Eagle managing edi- chips. Fifth was hamburgers and French fries and sixth, tacos, ta males and chili dogs. tor, Jim Holman, will serve as honorary starter. Runners need only to appear in clothes in which they wish to run in order to participate. Ad vance or pre-start registration is not required, Chevrette stated. Cbe Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the student writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax- supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enter prise edited and operated by students as a university and community newspaper. Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising Services, Inc, New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. MEMBER The Associated Press, Texas Press Association The Associated Collegiate Press i 1 Ken Ellis, Evangelist NEGLECTING SALVATION “How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?” (Heb. 2:3). Neglect is a serious thing. A careless lack of interest and attention will bring almost any possession or endeavor to ruin. It will do the same to one’s prospects for salvation. Pleasing God has both its negative and its positive aspects. We are not to do the things He has forbidden. We are to do the things He has commanded. One may not be engaged in doing wrong, but at the same time not be engaged in doing right. He may not be engaged in doing anything of spiritual significance. A person need not be a perpetrator of every vile deed to be displeasing to God. He may abstain from immoralities and still be neglecting his positive duties toward God and man. In Mat thew the 25th chapter the judgement is presented from three different standpoints. In each case the condemned parties were rejected not so much for doing wrong (things forbidden) as for failing to do right. They were charged with neglecting the duties which accompany salvation. A man may not be a murderer, adulterer, liar, or thief. At the same time he may not be a lover of God and men. God is not only interested in what we are not, but also in what we have not just in what we have not done, but likewise in what we have done. How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation? “ . . . much more shall not we escape, if we turn away from him that speaketh from Heaven” (Heb. 12:25). TWIN CITY CHURCH OF CHRIST 3610 Plainsman Lane Bryan, Texas Phone 846-4515 or 846-0804 Bonfire, Denver Kickoff Vacation 715 S. Main Bryan 822-2228 Closed Mon. Will do t: Typing, el< pin. 846-647; F«st and (veninffs. Typing 82i Typing n l*rienced. S Typing. C SP1 Ch Bodj Do It Y D Mon. ■ Sa Ren TY Di I Smi' LETTERS POLICY Leilas to the editor must be typed, double-spaced, rind no more than 300 words in length. They must be signed, although the writer’s name will be withheld by arrangement with the editor. Address correspondence to l.isten Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77S13. Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim Lindsey, chairman ; Dr. Tom Adair, Dr. R. A. Albanese, Dr. H. E. Hierth, W. C. Harrison, J. W. Griffith, L. E. Kruse and B. B. Sears The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M, is published in College Station, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and holiday periods, September through May, and once a week during summer school. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school year; $6.50 per full year. All subscriptions subj'ect to 6% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for reproduction of all news dispatchs credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Second-Class postage paid at Coliege Station, Texas. EDITOR MIKE RICE Managing Editor Larry Marshall News Editor Rod Speer Women’s Editor Janet Landers Sports Editor Bill Henry Assistant Sports Editor Kevin Coffey Phone 846-0951 ANDRE'S 213 University Dr. — College Station Open Mon. - Sat. NOW IN STOCK FOR CHRISTMAS 1, 3, 4, 5, and 10-Speeds For Men, Women, Children "Use our free storage" Women’s 10-Speed — $97.95 For 9 & 10 year olds: The Tyler 4-Speed — $79.95 We Carry: Victoria, Motobecane, Zeus, GDI, Bianchi, FOR QUALITY AT A LOWER PRICE COME TO ANDRE'S "Your interests are always welcomed” SAVE 20fo on individual ticket prices Season Tickets Reduced to $12.00 For All 4 Remaining Great Performances of Rotary Community Series: Jim Cullum’s Happy Jazz Band-Dec. 5 and Mark IV Quartet Dallas Symphony Orchestra - Jan. 18 A Midsummer Night’s Dream-Feb. 12 Preservation Hall Jazz Band-Mar. 26 Tickets on sale now in MSC Student Program Office — 845-4671 ROTARY COMMUNITY SERIES 1972-73 MSC Student Program Ticket Office, P. O. Box 5718, College Station, Texas 77840 , 1972 Enclosed is my check or money order payable to Texas A&M University for $ to cover the cost of: ROTARY COMMUNITY SERIES season tickets at $12.00 each for a total of $ Please print: NAME PHONE STREET CITY STATE ZIP Note: Orders filled in order received. No refunds. All sales are final. TYP 909 S. —I Pre: and Pi'emiut mountec balance! 1’riced “Sale” Just c others, grade 1 oompari Ha^ Coni Gul AT., Altern Sta fro Mo Forei 1 BankAi I Joe 220 Givir