Th& UomardicA STRICTLY PERSONAL including In The Nighttime/No One Like You/Bop Can t Get Over You She s Hot DAN FOGELBKRG moKM\ including Phoenm/The Last To Know Wishing On The Moon/Longer/Face The Fire Aerosmith: “Greatest Hits” • Ted Nugent: “Cat Scratch Fever” • Johnny Paycheck: “Greatest Hits” • Jeff Beck: “Blow by Blow” • The Clash: “Give Tm Enough Rope” • Toto: “Toto” • The Babys: “Anthology” • Muddy Waters: “Hard Again” • Johnny Mathis: “More Greatest Hits” • Saxon: “Strong Arm of the Law” • Tom Jones: “Classic Tom Jones” • Blondie: “Autoamerican” • Johnny Cash: “Greatest Hits” • Blue Oyster Cult: “Agents of Fortune” • Edgar Winter: “They Only Come Out At Night” • B.J. Thomas: “Love Shines” • Jethro Tull: “Benefit” • Huey Lewis & The News: “Huey Lewis <&l The News” • Tanya Tucker: “Greatest [atchet: HUNDREDS OF ARTISTS AND TITLES TO CHOOSE FROM ieaded n San Taylor: Hits” “Moll Strangt Francis “JT” • Leo Kotke: “Guitar Music” • Aerosmith: “Toys in the Attic” • Eddie Money: “Eddie Money” • Romantics: “Strictly Personal” • Moe Bandy: “Best of Moe Bandy” • Johnny Winter: “Still Alive & Well” • A1 Dimeola: “Casino” • Neil Diamond: “Classic/Early Years” • Simon & Garfunkel: “Sounds of Silence” • Return to Forever: “Romantic Warrior” • Charly McClain: “Women Get Lonely” • Ted Nugent: “Great Gonzos” • Willie Nelson: “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” • Peter Nero: “Greatest Hits” • Jim Nabors: “The Lord’s Prayer” • UFO: “Force It” • The Byrds: “Greatest Hits” • Chicago: “If You Leave Me Now” • Molly Hatchett: “Beatin’ the Odds” Hurry! Quantities Limited! Page 8/The Battalion/Friday, September 7, 1984 Big Broadway program planned for Town Hall By LOREN STEFFY Reporter Five Broadway plays and several concerts top the Memorial Student Center Town Hall’s calendar for the 1984-85 season. “We have a good Broadway pro gram and we hope to balance it with some good concerts,” Town Hall Chairman Julie Plessala says. Town Hall will present “Dracula” on Nov. 5, “Seven Brides for Seven Brothers” on Nov. 19, “Night Mo ther” on Jan. 29, “Brighton Beach Memoirs” on March 28 and “GiGi” on April 17. Season tickets are avail able at the Rudder Box Office. Town Hall is striving for diversity in its programming, Plessala says. Rock musicians, as well as country and western musicians and comedi ans are among the talents Town Hall hopes to bring to Texas A&M this season. The committee is negotiat ing with agents of performers for the concerts. In addition, Town Hall is putting out a survey to determine students’ interests in live entertainment. Plessala says a lot of work is in volved in scheduling a concert. Re sults of the 500-student survey are used to make selections. The list of performances on the survey is deter mined by extensive rese popular acts. After being agencies for various acts tacted. The booking of an pends on price, availability nical requirements. After the performance is Town Hall’s sulxoinmittnf promoting the event. PldL_ the committee does evervttn voiced in putting on ashotri,; for selling tickets. MSG Town Hall is a comna 120 to 125 members intern bringing quality live emeruc to the University. Commission denies reques to change zoning on land XH Gourse tain trz bn aut< vlonda J45-DS Bel from 6 Welsh hi torn < from 2 jFee is $ rii Drivinj i.m. to jties I'o ffic fin By LYNN RAE POVEC Staff Writer The College Station Planning and Zoning Commission denied a re quest Thursday night to change the zoning on a five-acre tract of land south of University Drive to General Commercial District C-l, despite several reasons the applicant cited for requesting the change. The land, located east of the inter section of East Tarrow Street and University Drive and zoned Single Family Residential District R-l, is owned by the College Heights As sembly of God Churcn. The church purchased the tract in 1975 because it intended to relocate from Bryan to College Station. Membership has since increased, and the church’s pastor Calvin Dur ham said relocating on the tract would be impractical. The land would lx? better used as a commercial property because sur rounding property is commercial, he said, and because University Drive, a "main artery to Texas A&M,” should not be zoned residential. The commission unanimously denied the church’s request. It then passed by a vote of 4-2 a recommen dation to the College Council that the tract bet Administrative-Pi ofessio AP. >rmg > Commissioner Kay Many| re/omng the land commefidq place a higher value on it would not Ik* in (he city's I est as the land is Itxated in (he city’s last major areas i lands,” he said. To iBaptist iBryan, “1 still think an K-3oi aid detttial) zoning is good fori out there.” Martvn said. Austin hopping with pesky cricket troubl Frt parati< jbeginn [classes | lion O United Press International AUSTIN — Millions of crickets in a mating frenzy have invaded Aus tin, including the hallowed halls of the Texas state Capitol. although there seem to be more of the pesky insects than usual. “They’r Dr. Charles Cole, a Texas A&M University entomologist, says the cricket invasion is nothing abnormal. 'hey’re seasonal," he said. “They’re attracted at night by the lights, and they’re all out right now because it’s time for them to mate and lay eggs.” A spokeswoman for the Travis County Agricultural Extension Agency said her office ha$i nearly 1(H) t ails from ixupiet about the crickets. De “Some guy from Bergstr nd a Force Base) called and ak were everywhere," she sakf/fis' it looked like some Alfred ffe| movie or something." 5 SI TEXAS. Th [from i will be Starting September 5th... 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