Monday, April 28, 1986/The Battalion/Page 5 evoted to career ductor wrapped up in music ‘ i s ill the exceptional people h<> have a hand in making artistic . hiii'-t'' here happen,” he says. “It’s i Id hat vet, where the status quo ! ii.is been established and it goes on 'd it and on and on, year after 1 1 with about the same enthusiasm l> \< I The excitement is so high that ^ l (i 11 jmi makes everything that hap- ,i , ns l )t ns just that much more special.” Krager s father and grandfather ' ' "•'•n named Franz, and although his '•uvms (hose to Americanize liis ame to 1-rank, he later decided he uiu'd to be known by his ancestral : aim I he foreign-sounding name mg the is an asset, given the current trend caching toward hiring foreign-born conduc es but his name change is far less : liasia than that of many aspiring inductors who have changed their ‘ ,'ai names to lielp their careers. Ihe orchestra takes up much of ki.igot's time but his teaching job is - dn one that allows him to reach peo- ' si, pie who otherwise might not be ex- 1 al an posed to classical music. lie brings enthusiasm and humor 1 '• his musk appreciation classes, re- ( nth telling a class that crescendo ■ md decrescendo marks on a musical v ore are ‘the ones that look like 1 ei sidewa\s ice-cream cones” and dem- 'h in onstraling how a composer of the l -‘ i i" 1 K baroque period would go about his ate out work at the piano. I he class is challenging, he says, be* uise the students have widely va- • i nig degrees of musical knowledge h lore they enter the course. He says e iliout a third of the students have xp' i iemv on a musical instrument aid about a third are what he calls ' ,' i• 1 \ exposed" to music — they a o« limited plaving experience. \nd then of course you’ve got 1 lit d that basicalIv play the radio ml die television and that’s it,” he Uespiie that imbalance in knowl- ige. krager sa\ s he doesn’t have a pro' ■lem leaching the class. i i never had a problem trying : . m . thoughts to other peo- ■ nd I think that helps the whole bat k to thing," he says. i Ins isn’t to say Krager has never h problems with teaching. In ■ om college student to college Missouri, he skipped a >tep in the traditional teaching lad- ' dm , not teaching in a public u tmem school setting. It was a rough first two years < iat Missouri) because 1 had no \ I o l ienee.’’ he says. “I was thrown • a situation at the age of a very 11 a11g ’1 where 1 had graduate stu- di nts under me who were older than 1 1 was. and I mean much older — . di< earh :W)s in some cases. Mid that posed real problems, t ■ l< li ning to find how far you could ith voui authority and learning i .1 people would respect you. t ! here w ere a lot of tense moments hi: those first couple of years.” Ki.-eci savs he thinks those initial problems were due to his lack of tea- • a his citing experience. Photo by Anthony S. Casper Franz Krager of the Brazos Valley Symphony Orchestra con ducts orchestra members at practice. “In this business, we’re dealing so closely with people’s feelings that in general you have to be a ‘people per son’ to be really successful,” he says. “And unless you know how to do that you’re going to step on a lot of toes and hurt a lot of feelings and make a lot of people angry at you — and you’re going to learn what not to do in a hurry.” Krager handles his classes with an ease that belies those early tense times. He wasn’t fazed when a student recently disagreed strongly with his evaluation of a performance. “That’s the thing about art,” he told the class. “There is no one per formance that satisfies everyone. That’s the way art goes. But if you don’t go, you won’t have an opinion. So you need to go.” Krager is not afraid to make his students laugh — even if they’re laughing at him. During a class dis cussion of the Vienna Choir Boys’ performance, he launched into an explanation of what he termed “a very embarrassing moment.” He spent most of a day preparing a detailed lecture on the choir, to be presented at the A&M Opera and Performing Arts Society’s Lag- niappe Lecture Series. In what he called “the nightmare of all lec turers.” the time of the lecture had been mispublicized. He stepped out on stage to give his lecture — and found himself face-to-face with a completely empty theater. “Anyway, minutes lalei there were 12 people in the audience so I went ahead with the lecture," be said. “ I he ushers, bless their hearts, came and sat in the back to make it look more crowded. “This is embarassing. I don’t know Why I’m telling you this. But if any of you have questions about the Vienna Boys’ Choir, I have a very elaborate lecture. "I try to tie what we study in depth into the whole art scene and how it’s part of the human soul,” he says. “I’m not concerned that people know details about remembering composers’ dates and the key to the second movement of a symphony and how many measures make up a phrase and all that stuff, you know, how many sharp's it takes to make up the key of whatever. “When they can hear a piece of music on the radio 10 years from now and keep it on rather than turn ing it off out of boredom or say to themselves, ‘Gee, that sounds like it’s out of the Romantic period,' those types of things are the things that are important to me.” wnai sup Monday THE BATTALION, applications are being accepted for edi torial cartoonist, columnists and photographers for the summer and fall. Applications can be picked up in 21b Reed McDonald. The Medical Sciences Library will be dosed to all but medical and veterinary medical students from 6:00 p.m. until dos ing May 4. to May 15. For more information, contact Vir ginia Aigermtssenat845-742T -w ENGLISH DEPARTMENT: will sponsor the mmi writing- course, “Proofreading^ at 6:30 p.m. in 120 Blocker. For . more information call S45-3452 or stop bv 227 Blocker. CENTER FOR RETAILING STUDIES STUDENT ASSO CIATION: Samuel Spritzer will discuss the different as pects of the retailing business at 7 p.m. in 153 Blocker, TAMU AGGIE MAJORITY FOR CLEMENTS: will sponsor a rally at noon at Rudder Fountain with free.cokes and a live band. Everyone is welcome, r -TT ; ; STUDENT Tr applications for public relations, cookie crew, freshman programs and Sesmncentennial chairmans are available through Monday on the second floor of the Pavil ion, iSliili • lllfli H • .'rVi:" tcbTf'MN-:: | ; : tl EL PASO HOMETOWN CLUB: will meet at 7 p.m. in 204 Harrington. AGGIE ALLEMANDERS: will meet at 7 p.m. in the lobby of Zaehry EngineeringCemfer, : 2 .: MSC AGGIE CINEMA: will meet at 7 p.m, in 502 Rudder. Til : ' • ENGLISH DEPARTMENT: will sponsor the mini writing- course, “How to Decode Your Writing/' at 6:30 p.m. in 120 Blocker. For more information call 845-3452 or stop by 227 Blocker. •.t/Tv ADVERTISING ASSOCIATION: Bill Mofl it and Charlie Moger form KSRR — 97 Rock in Houston will talk about advertising and promotions at 7:30 p.m. in 163 Blocker, AGGIE G.O.P.: officer elections will be held at 7 p.m. in 401 Rudder at 7 p.m. SPANISH CLUB: will elect officers at 8:30 p.m. in 410 Rud der. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SOCIETY: will have a panel discussion at 6:30 p.m. in 127 Blocker, AGGIE DEMOCRATS: will meet to discuss the primary at 8:30 p.m. in 502 Rudder. items for What’s Up should be submitted to The Battalion, 216 Reed McDonald, no less than three days prior to de sired publication date. Jury selection continues in organized crime case KERRVILLE (AP) —Jury selec tion resumes Monday in the state’s organized crime case against a Hill Country family and a hitchhiker ac cused of torturing to death a drifter who had been forced to work on a ranch. District Attorney Ron Sutton said the jury selection process, which be gan with the selection of an initial panel on March 24, probably will take a week to complete. I he state district court jury will consider the state’s case against Wal ter Wesley Ellebracht Sr., his son Walter Wesley Ellebracht Jr., and the younger Ellebracht’s wife, Joyce. The three, along with hitchhiker Carlton Robert Caldwell, are ac cused of the March 1984 death of drifter Anthony Warren Bates. Prosecutors say Bates was one of several hitchhikers who went to the Ellebrachts’ sprawling Hill Country ranch after he was promised work, and then was forced to stay. The state contends Bates was tortured to death with an electric cattle prod and his body burned. The court summoned 500 poten tial jurors in March, and narrowed that pool to 140. Another 200 were to report for possible duty Monday, Sutton said. Five other defendants, all drifters who at one time lived at the ranch, have been charged in the organized crime indictment. A 10th defendant, Darryl Hun- sacker, remains charged under the original murder indictment handed down before prosecutors obtained the organized crime indictment. en Martin’s Family Restaurant’s Specials of the Week Ken Martin’s STEAK HOUSE Chicken Fried Steak 59c Beef Tacos includes: baked potato with all the trimmings and hot bread all day Sun.-Thur no limit no coupons needed all 3 locations: only $2.99 Sunflay-Thursday 3312 S. COLLEGE Bryan Lunch & Dinner no coupons needed 107 DOMINIK DR. College Staion 3231 E. 29TH STREET Bryan POST OAK MALL College Station I J SlfiLOd t f „ STEAK MOUSE * -n# -««* -Wlfrn.ryp Chicken Fried Steak includes: baked potato with all the trimmings and fresh, hot rolls only $2.99 Sunday-Thursday Lunch & Dinner no coupons needed 2528 TEXAS AYE S, College Station The social event of the year is here Monmouth Duo presented by Pi Beta Phi and Kappa Kappa Gamma On the second day of May, Nineteen Hundred Eighty-six m JUSTICE ROBERT M. CAMPRELL SUPREME COURT B.A. DEGREE JURIS DOCTOR DEGREE 7 YEARS EXPERIENCE AS SUPREME COURT JUSTICE BUT YOUNG ENOUGH TO UNDERSTAND TODAY’S PROBLEMS FORMER SCHOOL TEACHER 2 TIME VETERAN U.S. ARMY TEXAS NATIONAL GUARD-10 YEARS AUTHOR OF 126 SUPREME COURT DECISIONS PROVEN ABILITY & INTEGRITY Paid for by the Robert M. Campbell Campaign, P.0. Box 8418, Waco, Texas 76714. : : . ■ ' - ;/ ■. ‘ : •- ' •' .’ T ‘ ‘ vf ■ ?*r- *’