The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 25, 1982, Image 16

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    national
Musician makes tunes
to help people relax
United Press International
SEATTLE — Stephen Hal-
pern, 34, likes music that pleases
all of a listener, not just his ears.
At the forefront of a phe
nomenon known as “new age
music,” Halpern’s albums are
not distributed in traditional re
cord stores. More likely, they’re
found at health spas, relaxation
clinics or meditation classes.
But he doesn’t worry about
not having a hit record.
“The goal is to serve, to uplift
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and to harmonize people in
allowing them to tune into their
own inner nature through
sound, allowing them to experi
ence true relaxation,” said Hal-
pern, a native of Belmont, Calif.,
between concerts during a re
cent concert engagement.
The sounds that emanate
from his electric piano, organ or
synthesizer are not what is nor
mally associated with beautiful
music. They contrast sharply
with the typical canned music
found in a doctor’s waiting room
or department store.
Halpern said his music is “a
sound bath.” He said he has con
ducted experiments, such as
bringing his music into a hectic
office, and found that it lowers
the tension level in minutes.
He said teenagers who are
into hard rock or disco are the
only group that doesn’t respond
well to his music.
Halpern’s music doesn’t have
the usual beat structure, harmo
nic cadence, rhythmic cadence
or melodic phrases of most tra
ditional music.
“It’s really a revolutionary
form of music at this time,” he
said. “It’s really not understood.
“It doesn’t have the big beat,
it’s not disco, you don’t hear it on
the Top 40, it doesn’t have all
the things we usually associate
with ‘music.’ And yet it’s beauti
ful, it feels good, it helps you feel
good.
“It presents a sound stimulus
that doesn’t have the usual cues
of predictability. Traditional
music has an anticipation re
sponse — you project into the
future what’s going to happen.
Mike 1
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the squad
After
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stalked o
Coliseum
chair in t
Thom;
Llimlr'i k
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846-6714
Corner College &
University Aves.
he finest moments a
screen can achieve. %
CHARIOTS
OFFIRE
7:25 9:55 ,
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!pg
MANOR EAST III
823-8300
JACK NICHOLSON
THE BORDER
7:25 9:50
LAST NIGHT!
TAPS
7:15 9:50
LAST NIGHT!
NIGHT CROSSING
7:15 9:35
STARTS FRIDAY
SOGGY BOTTOM
U.S.A.
and
JUST BEFORE
DAWN
On Jupiter’s Moon, he’s
the only law.”
MSC Cepheid Variable presents
SEAN
CONNERY i„
Thurs., Feb. 25
7:30 8c 9:45 p.m.
Rudder Theatre
$1.50
Baking for an annual banquet
Senior recreation and parks majors Gwen Gardner, left,
of Clever, Mo., and Amy Green, of Richardson, raise
money for the annual recreation and parks club ban
quet, to be held next month. Their booth outside the
Academic Building attracted many students, ii
agricultural engineering senior Douglas Frericli
Norton.
Lame game, battered beasts
inhabit zoo for the unwanted
game wii
taken oul
Shelby P
i mark aft
Angry at
the gam-
Metcalf
Davis, J
David Gc
the Aggi(
Texas
rectify T
he was st
; made th<
Metcalf
game to •
Rim on t
I Ilovve>
Metcalf
chance t<
United Press International
FORKED RIVER, N.J. —
Rosebud the pig shifted some of
her 600 pounds slowly on her
bed of straw, belched loudly and
yawned as the man standing at
the door of her concrete hut
tried to coax her outside into an
adjoining pen.
“Her head’s big, but when
you see her body, it’s unbeliev
able,” the man told an entranced
group of spectators watching
the standoff from behind a low
brick wall.
“But 1 don’t know if I can get
her out,” he said. “She’s
annoyed, you can tell that by the
look in her eyes. And when
Rosie is annoyed, she’ll do a
number on you.”
A few years ago, meat pack
ers were waiting to “do a num
ber” on Rosie. But a local far
mer, reluctant to slaughter the
pig because her black coloring
reduced her market price, de
cided to give Rosebud to the
American Humane Society,
which wasted little time in mak
ing her a star attraction at its
Popcorn Park Zoo.
The zoo is the Final stop for
dozens of handicapped and
abandoned animals, ranging
from abused bears and blind
wolves to crippled dogs and sad
dle-sore circus ponies.
General manager John Berg-
mann said the zoo was started in
1977 when a hunter brought a
raccoon, whose leg had been
caught in a steel trap, to the AHS
shelter.
“Not long after that, someone
brought in a deer that had been
hit by a car but was still living,
and other animals started com
ing in,” he said. “We just got big
ger and bigger.”
“The vets patched them up,
but there was no way they could
return to the wild. So we Finally
decided to build this small zoo.”
AHS executive director Lee
Bernstein said he sees the zoo as
a way for the animals to help
educate the public while they
live out their lives in peace and
comfort.
“Why destroy them? Why is
that the answer?” Bernstein
asked. “Haven’t these animals
suffered enough? And by doing
ilnv we are givingiht|H Goff,
and especially the chiL® slstant
unusual chance to seez®k- es
they wouldn’t ordinarikiff etca ^
Visitors walking throsj
zoo, located offadirtrdl
New Jersey Pinelantkf
flocks of one-leg^
wingless geese and
ducks that wander!
around the one-acre silt]
f eed popcorn to the lai
tame deer now living ii
of woods.
Many of the animalski
maltreated, he said, sid
mallard duck which!
in a bow and arrowaitad
have just outlived l
ness and have taken upr(
the zoo.
MSC
SCHULMAN 6
THEATRES
775- 2002 775
2468 E.29th 2463
TMl/EL
A TRIP TO
BARBAROSA(pg)
Willie Nelson, Gary Busey
7:30 9:45
WHOSE LIFE
IS IT ANYWAY?
.... ^Jfhja/d Dreyfus^ (Ppi)
REDS (pg)
7:20 9:40
ARTHUR
Dudley Moore/Liza Minelli'
7:10 9:25
WINDWALKER
Trevor Howard/Nick Ramus
tj* CHINA H
1
0
^Summer of782.
tTZ']9.'Wjr
7:15 9:40
RAIDERS OF
THE LOST ARK
*411 meals, lodging, ground transpor
tation in China
♦Visiting Shanghai, Nanking, Hang
zhou, Zuz‘
Fuzhou, c Beijing
*Sixteen days Iota I fend of May;
K3 **1990 including round trip airfare^
from West Coast to China
♦Sign-up begins today in MSC 216,
iSOO deposit
r*
for more info please call 845-1514 or sfop by MSC 216
CO-OP OPPORTUNITY IN CANCER RESEARCH
On Tuesday, March 2, and Wednesday, March 3, 1982, representatives I
Stehlin Foundation for Cancer Research (associated with St. Joseph’s Ho
Houston) will interview students interested in the Cooperative Education Program 1
will chose (3) three students to start co-op this fall. A minimum GPA of 2.7isrei
The Stehlin Foundation wants to interview pre-med, pre-vet, and pre-dental stu
as well as ANSC, Biomedical Science, Biology, Biochemistry, Bioengineering,I
crobiology and Zoology majors. The pay is $850.00 per month for the first work if]
and the positions are in Houston.
You must call the Co-op office at 845-7725 or come by Room 107, HarringtonTnj
for an orientation to co-op and complete your application prior to your interviews
Stehlin Foundation.
NOTE: In the past, the Stehlin Foundation for Cancer Research has empl
summer students from other universities and co-op students from Texas A&i
ty. All students who worked for them and desired to go on to medical school have5
accepted to medical school.