THE BATTALION FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1979 ct national n at tie project. 45 in a| ect. Hi service osmic Cowboy urphey’s performance mesmerizes 'special’ audience Page 3 ## an «enact- will cost District commit- western d nortli- e, would e whid ;day rec- andtlie Admin- ite anfl- industry ;rcento( decision the final nt ie usage t south- investi- gulatory man for ruilding t Worth ployees 1 to test -up of for an e said turing rce of from off by ing to >-long a down Gold .The sman lines, were i. St. :rews n the By LYLE LOVETT Battalion Staff “Geronimo’s Cadillac” poured through the stereo speakers. A crowd waited anxiously Wednesday afternoon at a local record store for Michael Murphey to arrive. The radio station made ready for a remote-broadcast interview and the TVlstation was on standby with its mini-cam. People milled about, up and down the aisles. Most of them carried at least one of Murphey s al bums At the cash register, ticket after ticket was selling for that night’s concert. He was to arrive at 3:30. Right on time, he walked up the sidewalk. The crowd didn’t notice. Murphey was just going to walk in the front door — alone, no fanfare, no Introduction. But about 10 steps from the door he was met by a man from the radio station who handed him a T-shirt bearing the station logo The man directed Murphey into the backseat of a small car and the car pulled away. About 10 minutes later as “Cos mic! Cowboy” began to play, the crowd cheered and Murphey walked out from the back of the store with a radio station-entourage. He was wearing the T-shirt. The interview was inaudible from the back of the crowd. But everyone watched Murphey talk and flash his charasmatic smile. The crowd was at least 90 percent female. And after saying how “good-looking” she considered Murphey, one girl whispered to a friend, “He’s a lot smaller than I thought. ” |®!Really, they’re never the same in person,” someone said sarcastically. Embarrassed, the girl giggled. The crowd had been gathered around the interview set in a semi circle, leaving some distance be tween it and Murphey. That dis tance wouldn’t last long. glfOK, I think we’re ready to do this, he said as the interview ended. The stereo played the chorus of Murphey’s “Healing Springs” as the semi-circle tight ened and autograph-seekers engulfed him. “Bring the lame, the halt, the blind ...” Murphey posed for pictures and signed albums and posters for a solid hour and a half. His smile never quit and never seemed put-on or forced. Hrf greeted each fan as if he or she were first in line. Murphey seemed genuinely interested. He displayed the same sincerity always present in his music. Report attacks pill use United Press International WASHINGTON — Some doctors may be endangering their patients by jprescribing long-term use of sleeping pills — used at least once a year by almost 8.5 million Ameri cans according to a new report re leased Wednesday. The study, prepared for the White House by the National Academy of Sciences, dealt specifi cally with barbiturates, a potentially habit-forming, sometimes lethal sleeping aid; and benzodiazepine, non-lethal but also potentially habit-forming and a drug that re mains in the system for long periods of time, affecting visual-motor con trol. A loss of such control while driv ing, the report suggested, could re sult in automobile accidents. It also noted that drugs are the second most commonly used means of in America. If he’s an act, he’s a consistent one. That night, Murphey played to an enthusiastic crowd that three- quarters filled the 1,500-seat Bryan Civic Auditorium. “I play a lot of small halls,” he said. “This is the smallest hall I’ve played in Bryan in the last four years. But that’s just because we’ve worked for the college the last four years and this year they just felt like it was gonna start lookin’ suspicious if they kept bringing back Michael Murphey. “You’ve gotta have change. So this year they wanted to do some other people in concert and I think they were right in deciding so. But at the same time I wanted to come back and play for the people who’ve supported me.” And Murphey did play. Two hours and three encores after the concert started, he walked off stage. The crowd was mesmerized. “I feel in some ways that tonight was the most special concert that I ever had here in town,” Murphey said later. “In spite of all the enthusiasm and hoop-la at the A&M shows, this audience was really an incredibly respectful, kind audience that listened one minute and really got energetic at the next. “Tonight was just really special for me because these people didn’t get in for nothin’. They paid to see the show. They wanted to be here. They weren’t here just because their student ID got’em in. And that really means somethin’ to me.” Murphey came out wearing a TOTAL FITNESS CENTER this ad for one free workout. 693-7823 Southwood Valley Center / 1808 Brothers Blvd. f Suite H College Station, Tx. 77840 Michael Murphey takes time for an interview after his Wednesday night concert in Bryan cowboy hat and boots and did play “Cosmic Cowboy” toward the end of the concert, but the set reflected musical changes his career has undergone. “I catch flak about it once in a while, but it only fans the flame,” he said. “It doesn’t discourage me, it encourages me. I know I’m going in the right direction when there are some people who don’t approve. Because when everybody’s your friend and everybody likes what you’re doin’, you’re in trouble — you’re stagnating. “Somebody’s gonna have to look at it and say, ‘Hey, aren’t you chan- gin?’ And if you’re not changin’, if you’re not experimenting around and moving on musically, you die. You play the same thing every night. “I’m too intrigued with music to let that drag me down. I like to play. I’m not worried about my image. Two hundred years ago I don’t think anybody said, ‘Hey Bach, we like your string quartets, but stay away from the organ and sacred music.” How about some beans & cornbread for lunch? Just a 1.95...weekdays at Fort Shiloh Hwy. 6 South, College Station [ ALTERATIONS' of 47. RE-ELECT JIM BOB COATES YOUR COLLEGE OF SCIENCE SENATOR IN THE GRAND TRADITION OF OLD TEXAS WHERE MOTHER TAUGHT DAUGHTER THE FINE ART OF SEWING — SO HELEN MARIE TAUGHT EDITH MARIE THE SECRETS OF SEWING AND ALTERATIONS. ' DON’T GIVE UP — WE LL MAKE IT FIT!” AT WELCH'S CLEANERS, WE \IOT ONLY SERVE AS AN EXCEL LENT DRY CLEANERS BUT WE SPECIALIZE IN ALTERING HARD TO FIT EVENING DRESSES, TAPERED, SHIRTS, JEAN HEMS, WATCH POCKETS. ETC. (WE RE JUST A FEW BLOCKS NORTH OF FED MART.) 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