The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 30, 1987, Image 6

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260-9184
Page 6AThe Battalion/Friday, January 30, 1987
Cambridge Buskers travel from street
to concert hall with humorous show
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& Saturday
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Walk-in Family Practice
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By Karl Pallmeyer
Music Critic
The Cambridge Buskers took
their music from the streets of Eu
rope to the stage of Rudder Audito
rium to entertain a crowd of about
2,100 Thursday night. If they had
passed the hat after their perfor
mance they might have doubled the
amount they received from ticket
sales.
The MSC Opera and Performing
Arts Society brought the Cambridge
Buskers, a duo consisting of Michael
Copley and David Abraham Gilles
pie (Dag) Ingram, to Texas A&M for
the first concert of the new year.
Copley and Ingram play classical
music on accordion and a variety of
wind instruments. With that type of
orchestration you don’t expect the
evening to be too serious. The duo’s
humor made the evening delightful.
For the trio section of John Philip
Sousa’s “The Stars and Stripes For
ever,” Copley kept referring to the
music stand to make sure he had his
part right. The only problem was
that there was no music on the stand
so Copley came in late on a couple of
passages.
Throughout the evening the
Cambridge Buskers performed
pieces with such unlikely titles as
“Vivaldi’s Concerto for a Small,
Black, Japanese Recorder” (actually
Vivaldi’s second and third recorder
concertos), “Johann Sebastian Bach’s
Theme from the Film ‘Phantom of
the Opera’” (Bach’s Toccata and Fu
gue in D minor) and “Morris Ravel
and Bo Derek Present ‘Bolero’ (Rav
el’s Bolero).
woi i'
I)..
re;
ce m
Photo by Tor (< •
Michael Copley and David Abraham Gillespie Ingram display their talents at Rudder Auditorium.
ATTENTION
MAY GRADUATES
ORDER YOUR GRADUATION
ANNOUNCEMENTS N0LU!
THE LAST DRY TO ORDER IS
THURSDAY FEB 1 2, 1987
MSC STUDENT FINANCE CENTER
217 MEM0RIRL STUDENT CENTER
MONDRV-FRIDRV 8R.M.-4P.M.
BBSS
The fact that Beethoven wrote
nine symphonies is well-known, but
what wasn’t so well-known (until the
Buskers did it) was that the third
movements of all nine symphonies
can be played in 30 seconds. The
fourth movement of Beethoven's
ninth symphony got a more ex
tended treatment later in the pro
gram.
Ingram introduced Aaron Co
pland’s “Hoedown" with a warning
that it tends to become “very west
ern." The Copland piece was com
bined with the themes from “Dallas,”
“High Noon, Fhe Good, the Bad
and the Ugly” and “The Magnificent
Seven,” along with a few "yee-haas"
from Ingram. Ingram's cannon im
personations during Peter Ilyich
Tchaikovsky’s “1812 Overture" and
his vocal “Ho-jo-to-ho’s” during
Kit hard Wagner’s “Rideo
kyries” were the source
laughter from the audienci
For one of the Busker
cores, Copley brought ou
-shafjed kazoo for
jah Ch'
Handel
whli 11
samp
cho's
f “ 1 !
cho< >s
com c
lar mi
P
>vid<
" i "" 11 five -
M-.siah U
fiom Copley, the;
d a weak choru
iah
Lawmaker predicts
nuclear waste dump
location to change
i h
go t! I
ent p.
In Advance
low
foo<
two < 1
T ,
111’ 1
EL PASO (AP) — An El Paso law
maker said he’d be willing to bet a
few paychecks that area residents
have defeated a proposal to put a
low-level nuclear waste dump in
Hudspeth County.
State Sen. Tati Sandesteban, who
opposes the dump, said he was reas
sured by a discussion Wednesday
with the general manager of the
Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Disposal Authority.
“In my opinion, we have beaten
them,” he said. “Let’s put it this way:
Right now, I think I’d bet a couple
months’ pay (that the site will be
moved).”
Mauro has told Sandesteban that he
will allow the dump site on land he
controls only under the direct order
of the Legislature.
The Hudspeth County sites would
be eliminated if the state-owned
lands are ruled out, authority gen
eral manager Rick Jacobi said.
Both of the authority’s final site
choices are in Hudspeth County —
one near Dell City, about 60 miles
from the El Paso County line, and
the other near Fort Hancock, about
13 miles from El Paso County.
Both sites are on state-owned
land, but Land Commissioner Carry
“We’d be dead in the water,” said
Jacobi. “It’s just that simple.”
Jacobi told Sandesteban that pri
vate landowners have offered seve
ral sites. But negotiations have not
gone far, Jacobi said, “because we’re
in the fix now to where the people
that are approaching us are inter
ested in making a tremendous profit
on their property.”
Sandesteban, a Democrat, specu
lated that the dump site would end
up on private land. The dump
should be situated hundreds of miles
east of El Paso to eliminate hauling
to West Texas, he said.
thai
Bio-ethics seminar to be held Saturdund t
:oir b
By Carolyn Garcia
Stull Writer
Three organizations are join
ing forces Saturday to try and
make the local community more
aware of their personal rights
when facet! with today’s bio-ethi
cal decisions.
Congregation Beth Shalom,
The Jewish Women’s Club and
the Hillel Jewish Student Center
are sponsoring a bio-ethics semi
nar Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in 501
Rudder Tower.
The first of the four topics to
be covered is the financial and
ethical considerations ot devel
oping an artificial heart. Dr. Da
vid Cross, A&M professor of vet
erinary medicine, will be the
speaker.
Gross will be followed by Wil
liam Hyman, A&M professor of
industrial engineering, who will
speak about informed consent
and patient rights.
The third issue to be ad
dressed, “Personal Choices, Tra
ditional Models as fools in Deci-
1 h
sion — Making, Including J ^ ast
Law and Rabbinical AuiE^tAX.
will Ik 1 covered by Rabbi
fallow, director of the
jewish Student Center and
tual guide oi Congregation!
Shalom.
“New Problems in Gene
the fourth topic, will ben Many
In Sheila Dobin, a genetici 1 Qrar
the Scott and White Cli has <
Temple. Ri (
Ruth Clearfield, pubjpTg
chairman for the group £ irj,
these issue’s should conce: s t a(e
eryone. Gra;
“ 1 his is not a Jewish
concern,” Clearfield said retill
something we will all have! fi nn
at one point and you've): shea
think about these issues l! fi as ,
you’re in that situation. collie
“As our society gets iiukII j.> (
phisticated we’re going a pi^
faced with these kinds of iss$6
There will he a questionra Cl< '
answer period after the ||§p ’
cussion. Admission is freef^S J
the i
open to the public.
Everything You’ve Always Wanted to
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A GUIDE TO COLLEGE STATION'S FOREMOST & FINEST PAN PIZZA BY THE SLICE
Freshly ground sausage
Flying Tomato's famous tomato sauce —
the recipe created (and carefully guarded!) by Ralph and Joe
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made fresh daily, risen and
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Rounu- spiced pepped
Rich layers of melted mozzarella
Fresh mushrooig
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Green peppers, cut in wedges,
not chopped pieces
Tangy onion, also sliced, not chopped
ButWcre Afraid to Ask
Vital statistics:
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Place of birth—Garcia's Pizza inaf
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