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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1977)
11 ii_ ta/-% i i WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1977 r-ayo r Hours: Tuesday — Sunday 11:30 A M. - 2:00 P.M. 5:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M. 1313 S. College Ave. Bryan, Texas Unfinished Furniture Center Do It Yourself & Save “Free Stain Classes’’ 314 N. Main “Downtown” Bryan 822-7052 BUSINESS COLLEGE Inquire About Our Term Starting July 5 Phone 822-6423 or 822-2368 GROUP POTPOURRI If you’d like to head off possible problems before they occur, join one of the special topic groups meeting weekly and con ducted by counselors in the Personal Counseling Service. Any A&M student is eligible to participate. (1) Students NEW to A&M, Thursdays, 3-4:30. (2) Assertive Training, Tuesdays, 1:30-2:30. (3) Relaxation Training, Wednesdays, 3-4. (4) Singleness over 25, Fridays, 10:30-12. Call 845-4427 to reserve a place. Drummer well-known now but likes low-profile life United Press International CHICAGO — In a business that regularly toots its own horn a lot more than the horn deserves toot ing, Ralph MacDonald is a rare un sung hero. You probably don’t recognize his name. But it’s estimated that if you listen to popular music of any kind — on records, on radio, even on TV commercials — you’ll hear Mac Donald about once every two hours, all day long. MacDonald, 32, has been called the “invisible man” behind the Grammy awards. He played on 16 of the recordings nominated for Grammies this year — and was on three of the winners, including George Benson’s smash hit pop-jazz album, “Breezin,” which picked up three awards all by itself. MacDonald is a percussionist, perhaps the most versatile percus sionist in the world today. He has Swrft Proten IFRESM FRYERS ROUND ISTEAKl ■^H08 bone- in Heavy Beef Full Cut lb. SUCED BACON £" iw 3 ». Jt 4 * Dinner Timer NEUH0FF FRANKS 2 breasts portions with backs 2 leg portion with backs 2 wings plus giblets lb. ^ 1 lb. f*9- Mennen List*! 99 419 LISTERMINT u*'2« **19 1 MOUTHWASH 18 ■ IRACER . Tiv: Ml. ■" MOUTHWASH “MENTURE NTURE Efferdent *449 HAIR Vitalis List *1" $^29 BLETS ML ■ TONIC 7 bfl. * FROZEN FOOD DEPARTMENT SPECIALS 1ANQUET FRUIT PIES .X 59 * ORANGE JUICE . 3 6 11 MORTON HONEY BUNS..9..box 59* Maxwell House FRESHI COFFEE Lilly 1 lb. can Limit 1 with ♦7 50 or more purchase CREAM Piggly Wiggly PAPER TOWELS giant roll M Gal. ctn. reg. BAKERY SPECIALS: JUMBO RAISIN OATMEAL COOKIES 6 ct. BANANA NUT BREAD 12 oz. AT K MART SHOPPING CENTER ONLY CORN BREAD APPLE & PEACH PIE.. 1 lb. pan 8 in. California CRISP LETTUCE Texas for WW*r'% B5? f 4N3 THESE PRICES GOOD THURS ,FRI ,&$AT, JUNE VINE RIPE CANTALOUPE ^isi X X ' x - lb. ,\l‘» CAPOS e.^!. 29. WATERMEIONS.» )oubl^SsH Green Stamps every Tuesdaq vyrtfi^ZSOor moro purohasg ★ 2700 Texas Ave. South ★ 4300 Texas Ave. ★ 3516 Texas Ave. ★ 200 East 24th St. ★ 9 Redmond Terrace COLLEGE STATION and BRYAN, TEXAS we welcome FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS worked with pop singers and jazz ar- 1 tists of every stripe, from Paul Simon and Bette Midler to jazzman Yusef Lateef and soul queen Aretha Franklin. He spends a good deal of his time jetting from coast to coast for recording sessions and he re cently released his own first solo al bum, “The Sound of a Drum.’’ MacDonald is also a major songwriter, composer of many hit tunes, including “Where Is The Love,” first recorded by Boberta Flack and since covered by more than 125 other artists in 19 lan guages. If he didn’t work another day, MacDonald’s successful music publishing company would guaran tee him more than comfortable liv-_ ing. Until recently, nobody outside the music business knew his name, but that is finally beginning to change. The soft-spoken Mac Donald allows as how it doesn’t mat ter much to him, either way. “I’m used to being in the back ground,’’ he said. “Now, slowly but surely, it’s starting to come out, to be known to the public that I’m on all those recordings. But it never did bother me. I like a low-key, low-profile life anyway.” As a musical double-threat man in areas — percussion and songwriting — not ordinarily associated with one another, MacDonald has encauntered the “invisible man” problem even among those inside the usually with-it music business. The son of MacBeth the Great, a calypso bandleader from Trinidad, MacDonald grew up in Harlem and began playing congas and other drums (he doesn’t use a trap set, the common snare and cymbal collec tion at all) at the proverbial early age. When he was just four, his father carried him to band dates all over Brooklyn and Queens, set him up behind his drums and let him pound away until he fell asleep. “I came right into show business with a top act when I was just 17. I didn’t have to go through the dive clubs and the sad hotels and all that. So I learned the business correctly, without people saying, “You got to go out and do it all the hard way.’ I paid all the dues — but at least I got a degree from it.” Shop for less at I Mt/rj/irf/tm mKrmjU Aggie Cleaners 112 College Main - Northgate Tuxedo Rental Quality Dry Cleaning Alterations