THE BATTALION Pag-e 2 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 28, 1972 Viewpoint CADET SLOUCH by jim Earie (Spreading Rocky Mountain High By TERRY YORK Some years ago the Smothers Brothers put on a relaxed televi sion program on the night stand ard musicians and backup people were on strike. Last week after a live per formance in somewhat the same vein at G. Rollie, John Denver noted he had the backing of that show’s producers to take the con cept and expand upon it, first in to a full scale special, then into a series. He has done a mid night special with only one week’s preparation, which gen erally pleased both himself and top brass with major TV net works. He has also a filmed show coming out Jan. 10 in which he plays the lead as well as writes the music for a trip through the Canadian Rockies in a search for big horned sheep. Control is his big thing. He’s seen too many good performers lose shirt and soul to the tube. “Roger Miller, when he was sing ing ‘King of the Road’ for two years in a row was the biggest thing in the recording business — TV, one season, and he hasn’t done anything since,” said Den ver. Denver’s formula is to take the small band he brought to A&M and add some of his per forming friends, “who’ve never been on television but who I think are great for television.” In the special, with “probably a couple of hundred thousand dol lars to spend . . . we’ll get to try some things.” The plan is to take the viewer in the direction of the campfire feeling, sharing a dream and a reality — all at the same time. “So we’re going to do a spe cial. And then I have an offer to do a show for eight weeks in London for the BBC. I went over and did an hour special, the same kind of thing and they were so knocked out by what I did — it was a one man show, just me and my guitar — they offered us 5 Hurt In School Shooting this three-month series on BBC.” With business intervening in the United States and still great ly concerned to have the show go exactly as he wanted it to, Denver told the BBC, “ ‘no’ for this reason. He then said, ‘We’ll do six or eight weeks if you’ll give us total control,’ and we just laid it on the line. And they gave it to us. We’ve got six weeks in the spring that we have complete control over. The only thing they’re providing is the director and the cameraman. With the experimentation he can do on the special and in Eng land “to find out what he can do, can’t do, what works and doesn’t work,” he expects to be ready for “five to ten years with a regular show on TV. He expects to generate the excite ment necessary to carry this off without the standard media de vices. “No dancers, no canned anything.” He has worked his thing out on stage, going from the song writer of “Leaving on a Jet Plane” to the performer of “Country Roads,” where the audi ence finds him. From then on BUSIER - JONES AGENCY HOME MORTGAGES INSURANCE FARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. 3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708 “ . . . Let’s see if I follow your logic- Last week you were opposed to th’ bonfire for ecological reasons, but now, you think they should build one next year because you built one this year?” PONTIAC, Mich. (A>) — Shots fired during a scuffle among black and white pupils wounded five sophomore pupils Monday at Pontiac Central High School, au thorities reported. One of the pupils, Timothy Williams, was hospitalized in □ Batt News Summary ± By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BEAUMONT, Tex. — Beau mont Port Commissioner Bill Kimbrough said Monday that a federal maritime administration study recommending the mouth of the Mississippi River as site for a Gulf superport would not harm Texas’ chances of getting a similar deep-water port fa cility. Kimbrough said the Lake Charles, La., to Freeport, Tex., area had the greatest concentra tion of petrochemical plants on the Gulf Coast and that a, super- port near the tip of •the Missis sippi River delta would not leave Texas out of the picture. Kimbrough said Louisiana’s ef forts to get a superport would be hampered because of the ecol ogy issue. Capt. Creighton Cook, was re ported under way on the tiny island, about 1,100 miles north west of Honolulu. Cook, attached to the U. S. Pacific Fleet Commander, Adm. Bernard Clarey, also participated in probing a racial incident last month aboard the aircraft car rier Kitty Hawk. HONOLULU — An apparent racial incident involving 130 sail ors at Naval Station Midway caught the Navy by surprise, a spokesman for the U.S. Pacific Fleet said Monday. Midway was considered to have “a good minority affairs pro gram,” the spokesman said. Five sailors — four whites and one black — suffered minor in juries in the fighting Saturday night but have been returned to duty, the spokesman said. An investigation, headed by WASHINGTON — The Envir onmental Protection Agency an nounced Monday a research con tract to Chrysler Corp. for de velopment of the gas turbine en gine as a possible alternative to present internal combustion auto mobile engines. Information resulting from the project will be available to the entire auto industry, an EPA spokesman said. He said the aim of the con tract was to develop and test gas turbines to see if they can compete with internal combus tion engines in performance, fuel economy, reliability and cost, while meeting federal antipollu tion standards for 1976 cars. 1976 would be the elimination of poverty. Warren was honored by the Federation of Jewish Agencies of Greater Philadelphia with its 1972 Humanitarian Award “for his deep compassion and commit ment” to all peoples during his 16 years on America’s highest tri bunal. He was the nation’s fourth chief justice. “Wouldn’t it be nice, in our bi centennial year, if we could say we were a more healthy nation on the way to eliminating pover ty?” Warren said. serious condition with a stomach wound. The other boys and two girls were expected to be released from the hospital soon. One girl is black, the other four pupils are white, school officials said. Lt. James Lafnear, school po lice counselor, said the racial scuffling occurred as classes changed at Pontiac Central. He said there was no immediate in dication what triggered the inci dent. Authorities said a black youth, believed to be a pupil, suddenly pulled a small pistol and began shooting. Lafnear said there have been no arrests although authorities are questioning sev eral students fitting the descrip tion of the assailant. Principal Don McMillen said the shooting scene is an open area between the school’s main building and its industrial arts building. He said, “There might have been a 100 to 150 passing through there before the actual shooting.” Police said they be lieve 30 to 50 youths were on hand when the shooting started. “it’s a whole different thing that happens.” He knows what he wants to happen and see that it does. I personally didn’t find that he had grown a lot from last year’s performance here; he even used some of the same pattern as he did before. But he admitted his need for a writer to do his link-ins for the tube and that he felt his strong points to be in the songs themselves. His excite ment and the depth of ideas for the future are very real and his sources of support are well doc umented. John Denver is passing his pipe to an ever increasing circle of family and friends, going from campfire to campfire in the flesh and in the mind, turning to new media to take him where he oth erwise couldn’t go, and every where spreading his own version of the Rocky Mountain high. Come By and See Our Unique Apartments 1 and 2 bedroom and 2 bedroom studios with four color schemes. Recreation Room and Large Pool Sauna Bath Tennis Courts Laundry Room 24-Hour Security Rent from $150. Utilities and T.V. cable paid. OOUTHUieST VHrLHGC apartments Q 1101 Southwest Parkway & Medina St. C.S. 846-1931 I I I -STAff MSC BARBER SHOP Will Be Open For Your Convenience Monday-F riday From 7:30 A.M. to 5 P.M. Starting December 4 Bulletin Board PHILADELPHIA — Former Chief U. S. Supreme Court Jus tice Earl Warren said Monday night that since the Vietnam war is “being wound down and fur ther foreign wars are becoming dimmer,” the greatest bicenten nial present for the nation in TONIGHT A&M Wheelmen will meet in Room 2B of the MSC at 7:30. A short film will be shown. American Society of Agricul tural Engineers will meet in the Lecture Room of the Agricultural Engineering Building at 7:30. Student Chapter of Associated General Contractors will hold election of officers for the spring semester in Room 127B of the Zachry Engineering Center at 7:30. WEDNESDAY Semper Fidelis Society will meet at 7:30 in Room 210 of the Physics Building. MSC Bridge Committee will 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 meet in Rooms 3B and 3C of the MSC at 7:30 p.m. Recreation and Parks Depart ment will present a discussion by Richard Cottrell on “Planning Mistakes.” Cottrell, chief planner of the Tennessee Valley Author ity’s “Land Between the Lakes” program, will speak at 7:30 p.m. in Recreation and Parks Building Room 115. Laredo Hometown Club will plan the club’s projected event in Room 123 of the Academic Build ing at 7 p.m. FRIDAY A&M Library will present David Clay, assistant to University of Texas President Stephen H. Spurr, in a talk on reorganization of the UT at Austin libraries. Clay will speak at 2:00 p.m. in the Zachry Engineering Center main auditorium. LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor must be typed, double-spaced, and no more than 300 words in length. They must be signed, although the writer’s name will be withheld by arrangement ivith the editor. Address correspondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school year; $6.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 6% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. 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 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 College Station, Texas. 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. 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 Dip and Dab Shop 206 S. Gordon, Bryan Art Plaster New Hours: (Beginning Dec. 4) Mon. & Tues., 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Wednesday (Closed) Thurs. & Fri., 10 a.m.-lO p.m. Sat., 9 a.m.-9 p.m. (Closed each 1st and 3rd Saturdays) Louise Parrett dull entertains University, op lays weekly, s ore color soui days we will ■rtainment sta in Hollywoi t - Monday r itotely free liable — Phoni lil Mobile Ho: as and 1% ba alter 5 p. m. Kent Ellis, Evang-elist “SON, REMEMBER” Two of the saddest words in the Bible are those which form our title. The tragedy of them is derived from the circumstances in which they are found. A certain man who had misused his possessions, opportunities, and life, died. Finding himself lost, he appealed for relief, and was answered with these words. The reminder of his lost opportunities undoubtedly added to his misery (Luke 16:19-31). The eternal fate of every individual will be sealed by his death or the second coming of Christ. When either of these events should occur, time with its opportunity to affect destiny will be forever lost. These are two things which no amount of money can buy or recall. Time, opportunity, and life can be used only once, for weal or for woe. Life is too short to be spent in vain, and eternity too long to be spent in remorse. How tragic it will be if you should ever be in the position to hear these words. Do not crucify your today between the two thieves of yesterday and tomorrow. One is gone forever and the other may never come. The Israelites of long ago squandered their present opportunity until the Prophet was forced to cry: “The harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved” (Jer. 8:20). The pages of history are full of people like Felix, who sought for a convenient season until there was no season at all (Acts 24:24-27). “Behold, now is the acceptable time; behold, now is the day of salvation” (II. Cor. 6:2). Now is the only time you have with certainty. Use it to live for Christ that you may live with Him in eternity. Use your present opportunity properly, and you will never have to remember it with remorse. TWIN CITY CHURCH OF CHRIST 3610 Plainsman Lane Bryan, Texas Phone 846-4515 or 846-0804 l** n0N (MEL J./AFS/A WANT M day • • ■ ic per word Minimu Class {1.00 p< eac DI 4 p.m. day — Phone 84f ridal set dian i. (150. 845-2 ASSUM No Dc 3, & 4 bed ms! slightly see thes< tings. IICK0RY HII 1700 Texas Special ] ienters bri feeipt and mount in urchase o time. tart Build: Hick Mobi 1700 r 82 BO Mobile Ho: lath. Excellei Me loan. 823- B2 Honda SL- tnt condition, : Redmond Phon 1402 H College 8 Prescri Charge A< Fre( -EVE Prestom and sun v BONFIRE PICTURES Phone 846-0951 ANDRE'S 213 University Dr. — College Station Open Mon. - Sat. 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