The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 06, 1982, Image 17

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The Battalion
December 6, 1982/Page IB
INC
erry Jeff converts
o relaxed lifestyle
10 ME?”
United Press International
lUJSTIN — Jerry JeHWal-
T, the “Mr. Bojangles” coni-
vvhose songs glorified
tigria wine and redneck
btners, now praises the won-
rsof vegetarianism and ex-
lise that have taken the 40-
r-old singer full-circle
km a life of drugs, booze
non-stop chaos.
|“I was a regular rolling par-
said Walker, a tall and
Iky composer-singer who
[scribes his rowdy and some-
lies bawdy music as “cow-
Walker’s sprawling ranch-
lie home m Austin’s hill
mtry now shows little sign
he fast life he spurned Jan.
1980 — the date he says he
ve up whiskey, red meat,
trettes, speed and cocaine
on the same day.”
A live-in helper prepares
etable pie in a kitchen with
iboards overflowing with
tlth foods. Walker’s wife,
san, is on a 9-day juice fast
1 rests in a bedroom while
ear-old daughter Jesse
es backyard tours of an In-
ii teepee where she says
clad “likes to sleep and lis-
to critters.”
It was costing me a lot to
high and I was still bored,”
Iker says of the years which
minated with him downing
1th of whiskey and snorting
e amounts of cocaine ev-
day.
I was consuming a lot and
hing was happening. Any-
e you find yourself not
jmipletely contented with
|at you’re doing, you need
■ make a change. I think
I • «
that’s where I was. This was
getting old. I’d just about
drank every place and been
every place, with everybody
there was to do it with.”
Walker, who added beer
and wine to his list of taboos a
month ago, runs five miles ev
ery day and has cut back on his
traveling schedule to spend
more time with Susan, Jesse
and his 14-month-old son,
Django Cody.
The role of family man and
health fanatic was slow in
coming to the boy from up
state New York who began his
singing career as a street musi
cian in New Orleans’ French
Quarter.
Fueled by a yearning for
great adventures, Walker
worked at odd jobs on his way
from city to city in the 1960s,
eventually mastering a pick
ing guitar style. He played
clubs in Austin, Kansas City
and many small towns.
After a disastrous trip with
a new band to seek his fortune
in New York City, Walker re
turned to Austin and wrote
his first hit, “Mr. Bojangles,” a
much-recorded folk tune that
spelled success for the com
poser.
. “I'm not really a country
musician, but people got to
call you something,” Walker
said. “That’s why the new
album is called ‘Cow Jazz.’
“After ‘Bojangles’ was a hit,
I was supposed to be a great
pop singer. They billed me in
one club in New York as ‘the
rich Gordon Lightfoot.’ Then
I met Gordon and we went to
his house (in Canada) and it
was this big castle, and I was
still living in a cockroach-
infested apartment in New
York.”
Walker did a bit more
traveling before settling down
in his hillside Austin home in
the early 1970s. He avoided
pressure by music studios to
make his songs more commer
cial and started recording live
at Texas honky-tonks in to whs
like Luckenbach, where his
big-selling “Viva Terlingua”
album was made.
Songs like “Redneck
Mother,” “Sangria Wine” and
“London Homesick Blues”
became staples on barroom
jukeboxes as Walker joined
the ranks of successful Texas
musicians like Willie Nelson
and Waylon Jennings.
But the booze, drugs and
fast living seemed to catch up
to him when he found himself
only a f ew years away f rom his
40th birthday.
“Some of it has to do with
age,” he said. “We used to be
able to drink all night and
crash for three hours and
then bound out the door. Now
if we drink all night we don’t
make it up until sunset, and
even then we can’t bound.
“It’s taken me a longer time
to find out what’s right to do.
I’m in a creative position to be
able to effect change in my
life, and that’s what I’m
doing,”
He says most of his fans
seem to like the new Jerry
Jeff, whose diet and exercise
regime results in more
energetic and personal per
formances.
luld you continue to earn
jrent interest only on new
iposits? Or you can call
1 Larry Miller CLU, Ph.D.
I fif Swede Hanson
693-6030
FREE
APARTMENT
LOCATOR
SERVICE
• Apartments
• Duplexes
• Houses
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• Townhouses
to* leasing for summer and fall. Special sum-
rates now available. Walking & biking dis-
incoto T.A.M.U.
r HOMEFINDER
PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT
696-1006
1055 S. Texas C.S.
ZALES
The Diamond Store
Introduces
A Special
Texas A&M University
Student Charge Account
If you are a junior, senior
or graduate student, stop
by Zales and apply for
your account today.
Manor East Mall
822-3731
Post Oak Mall
764-0016
Pl€NTV
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1
J
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Parking —
FOR RLL TH€IR CUSTOMERS!
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BOOKSTORE
"At Loupot's — Friendliness is Another Aggie Tradition
Prophecy brings bucks
United Press International
NEW YORK — Prophecies
are a lot safer in this age of elec
tronic computers than they once
were.
It still pays to hedge one’s
prophecies somewhat, said Fern
Pomerantz, vice president of
Predicasts, Inc., of Cleveland,
which does the broadest line of
business prophesying in Amer
ica today.
“We’re rather shy about
saying just how soon our
prophecies will come true,” she
conceded.
Prophecy always has been
profitable. Sophocles, the Greek
poet and dramatist, said
“Prophets are all a money
getting tribe,” and Saint Matth
ew said a prophet need never
lack for success and honor save
in his own country.
But it was a hazardous busi
ness. Prophets who told people
things they didn’t want to hear
stood to be beaten and if a sooth
sayer’s pleasing prophecies
didn’t come true, he was in dan
ger of being beheaded by the
ruler or stoned to death by the
mob.
Since Predicasts’ just released
annual volume of forecasts con
tains 50,000 long- and short
term predictions, a little hedg
ing may be wise.
Pomer antz said Predicasts’ re
cord for calling the shots well
ahead of time in the business
world has been “as good or bet
ter than that of the econometric
forecasters who build computer
models.” Predicasts uses the
computer but doesn’t build
models. She said inflation and
high interest rates have played
havoc with some of the com
pany’s dollar volume forecasts
but unit volume predictions
have been quite successful.
Predicasts was founded 23
years ago by Sam Wolpert, who
sold it a few years ago to the
Indian Head division of the
Dutch Thyssen-Bornemisza
Group. It has 200 employees
and earns about $10 million per
year.
The bundle of 50,000 fore
casts, made up of three quarter
ly editions and an annual sum
mary, sells for $575. Among its
more startling conclusions this
year, Predicasts says the market
for voice recognition equip
ment, now used in many compu
ter-controlled warehouses and
in other businesses, will grow by
about 78 percent a year in this
decade from $ 15 million to $ 150
million.
The study also envisions a 70
percent annual increase in this
decade in selenium micro-
nutrients, a 55 percent annual
growth in the production of
shrimp in fish farms and 47 per
cent a year for plasma proces
sing equipment. Big gains are
seen for robots, intrusion detec
tion devices and for such prosaic
things as radial truck tires, other
fish culture and polystryrene in
sulation.
But Predicasts forecasts aren’t
all rosy. It sees a continuing
drop in demand for combustion
turbine power, exports of lead,
coal, polyethylene and many
other commodities and a drop in
labor demand by the railroads
and some other industries.
Predicasts also puts out an
annual volume called the U.S.
Economy Outlook. In the 1983
edition, economist and editor T.
Kevin Swift is on the optimistic
side compared with most cur
rent prognosticators.
T-S-O
Prescriptions Filled
Glasses Repaired
BRYAN
216 N. Main 799-2786
Mon.-Fri. 8-5 Sat. 8-1
COLLEGE STATION
8008 Post Oak Mali.. 764-0010
Mon.-Sat. 10-9 p.m.
Texas State
m Orticae k
Since 1935.
CONGRATS AGGIES!
It’s time for graduation and graduation gifts...but before you begin
thinking of what you — the 1982 graduate of Texas A&M — would like
for graduation...
Say Thanks! Tell the people that stood by you during your academic
career at Texas A & M -- thanks! — give them a 1982 Aggie Ringcrest®
plaque. A walnut finished deep cut moulding frames the original Aggie
Ringcrest®. An inscription plate is included making a very personal
"thank you." We will have a full stock of single and double Aggie Ringcrest®
plaques immediately after graduation to engrave the inscription of your
choice. And while you're saying "thanks”
Single plaque: $ 29.95
Double plaque: $ 49.95
Don’t forget to...
Preserve the Accomplishment
....with a photographic reproduction of your Texas A&M
diploma on bronze. This treasured momento will be
mounted on a maroon velvet background and touched off
with a walnut colored frame We will photograph your dip
loma WHILE YOU WAIT soyou can taketheoriginal home
with you. Your bronze diploma will be in your hands no
later than Christmas!
AVAILABLE IN THREE SIZES.
Bronze Diplomas: $ 56.00 - $ 100.00
OMC will be open especially for 1982 Aggie Graduates
and their families on December 11, from 9 AM - 5 PM.
OMC is located on FM 2818 (the West Bypass),
north of The Texas Hall of Fame.
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