The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 05, 1980, Image 3

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    THE BATTALION Page 3
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1980
/e the si
— the
ngs
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guys camel
t the
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airplanes,
sd Reagan
r curse
ating today,
;e at the
icy dohai
e govern®
i-welfaresr
day. And!
lajorit)' is
ntle itinai
Shake Russell sings an original tune before a full house in
Rudder Theater Tuesday night. Russell fronts the Shake Rus-
sell-Dana Cooper Band, a Houston-based group. The concert
was sponsored by the MSC Basement Committee.
Russell-Cooper
blow crowd away
By TODD WOODARD
Battalion Staff
Intensity describes the Shake Russell-Dana Cooper Band.
From the opening chords of “Song on the Radio,” Russell and
Cooper leaned into their microphones and sang of old times and old
lovers and ’47 Chevrolets, their faces tight with expression.
They sang to an enthusiastic audience. Many of them Houston
residents, those people came to have a good time and were not
disappointed.
It was the band’s first show in Rudder Theater. Before, they had
frequented the Basement Coffeehouse, with its tight seating and small
capacity. This 700-plus audience dwarfed a Basement audience for
Russell and Cooper last February.
Just as then, Russell’s gravelly voice and Cooper’s range and har
mony blended, making music that goes down like sippin’ whiskey,
jolting at first but warm and satisfying.
Feeling is important, he said. “Beethoven, Bach, they just weren’t
trying to sell records,” he said in a pre-show interview.
That feeling Russell mentioned hushed listeners when Russell sang
“You’ve got a lover.” With Michael Mashkes on bass, Jim Alderman on
drums and accordion and Riley Osbourn on keyboard and piano,
Russell sang about other lovers and himself:
“You’ve got a lover, and it’s not me,
“He can t love you like I can,
and there will be others, yes I understand,
but will they love me like you can?
Alderman would play his accordion after Russell sang, and it was all
romantic and sad. When Cooper added harmonica, melancholy
washed over me.
I think Russell took everyone’s minds and shipped them to a place
where hurt is poignant but not crippling. Nobody even coughed.
Eventually, I was aware of nothing except my memories and Russell’s
voice, “But will they love me like you can?”
After Russell finished, a pregnant pause followed. Then the minds
came back, bringing nervous coughs and rabid applause with them.
My hands were stinging until I realized how hard I was hitting them
together.
Saturday is MBA/Law Day
By JANE G. BRUST
Battalion Staff
Students interested in business
administration or law degrees can
gain insight from experienced per
sons on Saturday.
MBA/Law Day, an annual project
of the MSC Council, will bring rep
resentatives from ten law schools and
ten schools offering MBA programs
to Rudder Tower for two four-hour
programs, Chairman Doug Noah
said.
The deadline for signup at the
Rudder Box Office is 5 p.m. Friday.
Tickets are $1 per program or $1.50
for both, with the MBA program in
the morning and the one for law in
the afternoon.
An additional $3.50 will buy a bar
becue lunch catered by Food Ser
vices.
One keynote address will be made
at each program. Jess Totten, assis
tant to the dean at the University of
Texas Graduate School of Business,
and Garland Walker, dean of the
South Texas College of Law will
make these addresses.
Panel speakers include represen
tatives from law schools at Tidane,
Georgetown, Baylor and Texas
Tech.
Noah said among the panel speak
ers at each program will be former
students of Texas A&M University
who have entered into such graduate
work. Each panel will conduct a
question-answer period.
He said the MSC project is de
signed “to offer insight from people
who have been through it.”
The MBA/Law Day committee ex
pects 400 persons to attend the prog
ram, even though ticket sales have
been slow. Noah said the sales usual
ly pick up quite a bit at the end of the
week.
“Our project is funded by re
venues from the tickets and from
solicited donations — we don’t get
any student service fees,” he said.
Noah said the project is budgeted
for $2,700, most of which covers
printing costs for publicity posters
and information packets distributed
at each program.
7ing sints
r either,
eps
from
ipartments
jleet OCA
IjBy USCHI MICHEL-HOWELL
Battalion Staff
■Protection from dishonest apart-
fent managers was the focus of the
Texas Apartment Association-
[irected discussion at Tuesday
light’s Off-Campus Aggies meeting.
| Barbara Stone, chairman of the
iwner/resident council of the Bryan-
jollege Station Apartment Associa-
ion, said the organization has pro-
ided the Off-Campus Center with
ample complaint forms and proce-
lures that would help student
enants with complaints against man-
igers or apartment owners.
pYoung people are too naive when
ley sign their first lease and don’t
Ladies who is
MR. MACHO OF BC-S?
Find out Thurs., Nov. 6
ZACHARIAS GREENHOUSE
693-9781
YES
The FUTURE TELLERS
"Nov. 10 at 8 p.m.
Rudder Auditorium,
Adm. Free”
MSC ARTS PRESENTS
NTSU 1 O’CLOCK
LAB
University Lutheran Chapel
3T5 N. Colieoe Main
I. College Main
Hubert Beck, Pastor
WORSHIP WITH US THIS WEEK.
846-6687
1 directional
i David FlfWen read the whole contract,” said
mo Franco P ne > w h° own s 24 rental units her-
to repre p rov iding education for its
3n ' members, TAA wants to make leases
, the soto Ipjarer and follow fair standards of
• Oneistlif jojopgytjQjj XAA also vows to
iractice a™,endeavor to expose all schemes to
im the Pcii'&leacl or defraud the apartment-
epartmentlpiding public and to aid in the exp-
; ’s recogniir^ 111 ' 6 of those responsible.”
ing Thist" however, the association cannot
3 s and oft# tenant:s legal action against
their apartment managers, nor
k money obtain claims for them, Stone said. It
niversity on jy eX p e n the member, she
rt that s
ge Stationd’ In 0 ther business, OCA bonfire
:er team Mhairman Phil Suter offered trans-
onsistingkfcortation to the cutting site Sunday,
the soccerofterested students should contact
Team
him in the OCA cubicle in the Stu-
1 dent Programs Office in the Memo-
^ an S , 1 rial Student Center or meet him he
lps make ! « een (3.15 an( j 6:30 a.m. in front of
niversity li ncan field.
■ers can gw . ,
AGGIE CINEMA
We feel it’s
soccer teai 1
rved
Paula Hill®
SUNDAY SERVICES AT 9:15 AND 10:45
A.M. AND 7 P.M. WEDNESDAY EVENING
CANDLELIGHT SERVICE WITH HOLY
COMMUNION AT 10 P.M.
one potato,
[wo potato...
A budding new taste sensation, is
now in College Station!
Original Potato House,
in the area
at
102 Church St.
College Station
Behind Northgate
Eat here or to go. 846-0720
Dennis Ivey's
Lake view Club
The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing"
5$
Thursday Nigh
LONE STAR
DRAFT REER!
Music By Dennis Ivey
Cover $3.00 Men & The Waymen ‘
$1.00 Ladies
Saturday Night
Dennis Ivey & The Waymen
$3.00 Cover Charge
$2.00 Pitchers of Lone Star
Draft Beer
Come Get Acquainted With OT Amarillo,
Our Mechanical Bucking Bull.
3 miles north on Tabor Road
off the East Bypass
You’ve invested
a great deal of time
in your education...
editorial ^
300 words in M
er. The editor^ 1
and length, W
s iiitenl. - ■
ohone nuDi^®
vlcome,
letters.
The Bittali* ,
College Sta^
s
[exasA&M's^ 1
ixamination
:r, $33.25 p«
lies fumisW® 1
McDonald
1X 77843.
xclusivelytod* 1
dited lo it. W*
served ' -.fi
ation, XX
i
Bd
YOU CAN DECIDE
WHAT MOVIES WILL BE SHOWN IN
SPRING SEMESTER 81
BY
PARTICIPATING IN A POLL
SPONSORED BY
MSC AGGIE CINEMA
THE POLL WILL BE CONDUCTED NOV. 3 — NOV. 6
AT
THE MSC
THE BOX OFFICE
ZACHARY &
THE COMMONS
MSC AGGIE CINEMA — AN ORGANIZATION TO SERVE YOU!
2
s
2
::3
i
3
■ ■■I
it’s time
to make it
pay off.
Al RESEARCH
MANUFACTURING CO.
The pay-off comes at AiResearch in Arizona. We have some exciting
career options to offer Engineering students interested in the field of gas
turbine technology.
As a pioneer in the field of aviation and aerospace products, AiResearch
is continually searching for innovative new directions to take in a variety
of future-oriented projects. But we need you to help us meet our goals. If
you like this kind of challenge and the rewards that we can offer you for
your dedication, AiResearch could be your next stop after college.
The time to make your efforts pay off is now, and the place is AiResearch
in Phoenix, Arizona. Our location in Phoenix offers you year-round
sunshine and a casual, outdoor way of life. In a city where the average
age is 28, you’ll find both an active lifestyle and an exciting nightlife.
Meet AiResearch November 10 from 7-9 p.m. at Rudder
Tower, Room 401. We will be showing a slide presentation
and serving refreshments. Interviews will be held November
11 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.