THE BATTALION Page 3 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1977 ition and greement vides said said tbc) would I* iervice ■s’hich (lie “d to pay ' aid, fie- s to cool ifter Sen, 'een CSt 'day Minonte sday tlie rvite has diate de nigration area for :ly misin- :hem the Iship be- 5 million Battalion photo by Lyle Lovett Robert Keen and Sunny Fitzsimmons, members of the ‘Front Porch Boys” singing group, practice for an upcoming concert. Performers’ auditions are held at the Basement Committee meetings every Monday night at 7:30. ity Council beseiged ith merger proposals By RUSTY CAWLEY Battalion Staff derger, merger and Id not hr -poverty of a na- nson Li- h would sons, in- > private dudes a :iity pro gram for e increase Jay 11-3 i 0.4 per i was no liled the had con- FBI jarterol nds ays witn Tal (old ok $181 he froiil ite, who . Pofe rusiness ger- hat’s the subjeet of the week for College Station City Council. ’wo proposals are before the incil. One is to merge the city’s office with the A&M Consoli- ed School District s office. The er is to merge the entire city Bryan. [he couneilmen are considering first proposal but thumbing ir noses at the other, n a meeting Wednesday, Coun- nan Lane Stephenson asked for informal poll of the council to ige the members interest in rging tax offices with the school Irict. ’he poll was taken at the request the A&M Consolidated School ird. he school board seeks to join the tax offices. The trustees claim offices duplicate information, nding tax money needlessly. Councilman Larry Ringer moved instruct the city manager to look ther into the proposal. The motion passed with one dis- it: Councilman Jim Dozier. We’ll end up with the property ners screaming at us rather than school baord, Dozier said. \t school district is just trying to id us their problems. It’s a school hoard problem, not ity problem, and I don ’t want any rt of it. " ity Manager North Bardell said city had once collected taxes for school district. But we just couldn’t put up with Bardell said. “That’s why the offices were divorced,” Councilman Gary Halter said he ildn’t see that merging the two es would save any tax money. Halter said. Still, he favored study ing the matter further. Councilwoman Anne Hazen said the council should consider the merger. “We owe it to our taxpayers to look into this, Hazen said. “If we turn it down, we should have a good reason. But Dozier remained firm. “We re not going to take over the school hoard’s problems, Dozier said. “That’s the biggest mistake this council could make, The other couneilmen, however, want to review the school district’s proposal. But Bryan’s proposal to merge with College Station is another story. College Station Mayor Lofence Bravenee made it clear that the Council would call no special meet ing to consider Bryan’s proposal. The proposal, contained in a let ter from Bryan City Manager Lou Odle, has not been received. Odle called Bardell yesterday and told him the letter had been posted. “We should get the letter in the next couple of days,” Bardell said. “I guess we 11 read about it in the paper tonight,” Bravenee said. “Why don’t they just send us a paper instead.” Jupfnamka Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega 74 eked engers ombaj laveaf Army airline had as ind 13 tliner, sy said ire via three of the into ubang e split it sec- iivere There’s nothing economical )ut consolidating bureaucracies,” uicide ruled i Smith case iTexas A&M University psychol- fj' professor William R. Smith, Itice of the Peace B.H. Dewey, announced Wednesday morning. Smith was found dead in his car it Friday on the west feeder road I Highway 6. Investigators said Smith shot iniself in the chest with a .22 mag- weapon. Smith resided at 1826 Shadow od. If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . We call It “Mexican Food Supreme.” ‘Rose’ with thorns By JEFF GILLEY Something’s wrong with De borah. Deborah is 16 and pretty. She slashes her arm with a tin can lid, sears it with burning cigarettes, pounds her head on the floor, and lives in a kingdom called Yri. Deb bie is schizophrenic. T Never Promised You a Rose Garden,” starting Friday at the Cinema I and II, is the fine film ver sion of Hannah Green’s bestselling novel detailing a young girl’s battle with madness. Like “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” “Rose Garden” takes place in a mental in stitution well-populated with loonies. “Rose Garden,” however, doesn’t exploit madness as an alle gory, hut exposes its anguish with touching realism. Newcomer Kathleen Quinlan plays the young girl bouncing be tween reality and her own dream land. Like the other patients in her ward, Deborah is frightened of the outside world and the “reality” of Embrey’s Jewelry We Specialize In Aggie Rings. Diamonds Set — o Sizing — Reoxidizing — £11 types watch/jewelry 0 Repair Aggie Charge Accounts 9-5:30 846-5816 life in a mental hospital: beatings by a brutal attendant, attacks by other patients, being strapped into a co coon of bedsheets, and so on. With the help of one humane psychiatrist (Bibi Anderson), Deborah gains the courage to fight the security of her private world of tribal heroes, de mons, and punishing gods. Through the doctor we receive hints of what triggered Deborah’s illness: a childhood trauma, hatred of her sister, and an overpossessive father. But the basis of her illness is left as shadowy as her parents, two areas that need further exposition. The film is also weakend by low production values and a contrived baseball sequence, hut these are comparatively minor annoyances. Most of the film’s success rests on the superlative ensemble of players, led by Quinlan as Deborah. Always fascinating, her interpretation of a schizophrenic includes such mar velous details as a painful, shuffling walk, an upraised hand caressing the air, and any motion of a uniquely expressive face. The result is a character of depth and power rarely seen outside the best Broad way has to offer. Director Anthony Page wisely al lows the performances to unfold without interference. Still, he gives the film impact without letting it turn into an “Exorcist ’-styled freak show. Easily rising above its faults, “I Never Promised You a Rose Gar den” is simple, moving, and agoniz ing. Like “Rocky” of last year, it is a brave little film that made good; un like “Rocky,” it is sentimental with out being manipulative. In an age of empty superspectaculars and ex ploitation cinema, what higher virtue can a film claim? Mester Tfluti ;m |uto IW (taily Closer to A&M to serve you better. 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