The Battalion Page 7 Monday, November 27,1989 WiRED THE TEXAS POLICE DEPARTMENT MHOMCEP TODAY THAT ALL PAKKIN6 A A/P TRAFFIC r ...VJILL BE TRANSFERRED ONCE AGAW A-VD PUT UA/DEL.R Tf/E CPA/TK3L OF THE CAKWS CYCLOTRON. by Scott McCullar © i9S9 mmm THAT FI6UKE5.THETRE 05 ED TO KEEP//VO TRACK OF ULTRA MINI5C0LE REGIONS. WALDO Adventures In Cartooning By KEVIN THOMAS by Don Atkinson Jr. Bonfire.., Fi night of <58097 FOR f\ NIGHT WW£AJ A50/GS JOIN TOSETHCfi AND 3HM£ a common Bond. ■ (jNFflfmWATaV, flfM ALGO HAS A DARHEA TRRDmON... I ...TeACHEPS ASSIGNING TONS OF HOMEWORK ON BONFIRE NIGHT ff! /fff nin IPhIi al —« k\\ Smllil MaTi \ wnals* i 1 “v ! ...FOR TOMORROW, I WANT you to Read ci/cwthing EVER WRITTEN BY WUURM SHAKESPEARE AND GIV£, AN ORAL P&ORr!! £)/»? m*r. ICoKTlNUED... SpRot Ph illips ^ Pi. WHAT 16 THIS? 'too'W »/ ^ UBR/HOf AMD TOU'KE READIK6 DANIELLE STtSlL? r can't ZEueve n! tn thb LtMKf of A M^JoR uMtvfKSfTT N^ITH ■norWoN&c* fbc, ZlAKf, fA>4D,TwaiN,HeiHiEitJ /iMO HoRC of btefIT / V ftNOfo? WAlT< TOOK T(KE WITH TMSH LIKE PAMlELLf sTceuc: Disc jockeys document Del Rio influence on roots of pop music DEL RIO (AP) — Two British Broadcasting Corporation exec utives say modern pop music fans owe a big debt to Del Rio. Disc Jockey Nick Barraclough and BBC executive producer John Leon ard in their quest to find the roots of Imodern music, came to Del Rio last month to research the area’s impact on popular music. The Beatles, Elvis, the Rolling Stones, Roy Orbison and all their predecessors owe their beginnings to Del Rio, according to Barraclough and Leonard. “We owe an awful lot to what hap pened here,” said BBC announcer Nick Barraclough. “Here on the bor der was where pop music really got started.” During the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s, radio broadcasts from across the Rio Grande inundated North America with a wide variety of sales pitches touting everything from auto graphed pictures of Jesus to cures for whatever ails you. A small building just across the border — equipped with a not-so- small transmitter — was all that was needed to blast a message across an entire continent. The first and most famous of these wildcat radio stations had its origins in Del Rio. Dr. John Brinkley, probably best known as the infamous “goat gland specialist,” came to Del Rio in 1931, bringing his unique medical practice with him. Outcry from medical authorities in Kansas, less than impressed with Brinkley’s procedure for curing di minished sex drive (implanting bits of goat testicles in the scrotums of af flicted men) led Brinkley to move his practice to Del Rio. Brinkley set up shop in the Ros well Hotel in downtown Del Rio; at the same time embarking on a south- of-the-border broadcasting venture that came to have a profound impact on modern popular music. Leonard and Barraclough’s work here will take the form of a one-hour radio broadcast that will air in Great Britain in early 1990. So now, nearly 60 years after Brinkley set up shop in Del Rio, mil lions of Brits will hear the booming voice of 40-year-old border radio veteran Paul Kallinger and other Del Rio residents recount their mem ories of the advent and heyday of stations XER, XERF and XERA. In tracing the history of today’s sound, Leonard and Barraclough found that popular music, on both sides of the Atlantic, had roots in Del Rio. Brinkley, by invading the air waves to sell his many wares and hawk his various cures, provided a basis for what is now enjoyed by mu sic lovers worldwide. While Brinkley’s was only one of several such stations, his was the one that went on to help shape the sounds of the 1950s and ’60s — which in turn formed the basis for today’s pop music. “All over the world, radio at that time (the 1930s) was regarded as a way of conveying news and informa tion — it was providing a service,” Barraclough explained. “It wasn’t until things started happening down here that radio was used as enter tainment and a way of selling things.” The idea of producing a radio documentary highlighting Brink ley’s contribution to music came to Barraclough after reading “Border Radio,” a book by Bill Crawford and Gene Fowler that chronicles the evo lution of the “Border Blaster” sta tions. “Del Rio and this part of the coun try hasn’t’ really been recognized for its contributions to pop music,” Bar raclough said, “and John and I thought we’ve got to get (to Del Rio) to get the true story.” Before coming to Del Rio, Barra clough and Leonard took out local advertisements asking anyone who had recollections of Brinkley’s broadcasts to contact them. Local residents who have, on other occa sions, consented to talk about their experiences with Brinkley and his broadcasts have become a bit gun- shy due to sensationalized accounts of the Brinkley legend. “During the interviews Nick doesn’t say very much,” Leonard ex plained. “He just says, ‘Well tell us the story. What do you remember?’ Then people can tell their story, and it’s accurate. We don’t try and distort it in any way.” “What we’re trying to do is not so much to interview people as let them tell their stories,” added Barra clough. Brinkley’s broadcasts had their first major impact on the country singers who later frequented such radio programs as The Grand Ole Opry and the Louisiana Hayride. “They were all artists who had been weaned on what they’d listened to on the border radio that was com ing out of Del Rio,” said Leonard. “I’ve been interested in folk music and country music all my life,” said Leonard. “I listened to the Carter family 20 years ago, and what I’ve only just realized was that I was lis tening to broadcasts that were re corded in Del Rio. “Back when they were broadcast ing on Del Rio radio, that was going out all over the whole world. The Carter Family — the way they played guitars — is exactly the same way country musicians play now,” he continued. “And the country music influences are what Elvis picked up on, what Carl Perkins — all these people started to play like. All the people out of Sun Studios in Mem phis — they were all influenced.” Bowie (Continued from page 6) City,” and a rare single version of “Rebel Rebel” that does circles around the classic original, are just a few of the gems Ryko has included to catapult Bowie’s collection be yond being a meager greatest-hits package. In fact, “Changes,” “Young Americans,” “Sound And Vision” and “Ashes To Ashes” are the only hit singles released on Sound & Vi sion in their original format, a giant plus that should intrigue any blue- collar rock fan. David Bowie, with apologies to John Lennon, is the greatest rock art ist ever, conquering every imagin able form of rock. From glam (Ziggy Stardust) to disco (Young Ameri cans) to New Age (Low) to top-40 (Let’s Dance) even to punk (Tin Ma chine), David Bowie has done it all and done it well. And with Sound & Vision, little Ryko has done it all and done it very well. The collection costs a steamy 60 bucks, but even to this anti-CD reviewer, it’s worth it. Food (Continued from page 6) Sbisa, Bemie’s features Italian en trees, salads, snacks, beverages and oven-fresh pizzas (a specialty item many label “delicioso”). There’s no place better to get a re freshing drink after you’ve finished a game of golf than at the Golf Course Snack Bar located in the Club House. Serving hamburgers, sand wiches, snacks and beverages, it of fers reasonable prices and a conve nient way to satisfy your hunger and quench your thirst. Headed to the library, but need an eye-opening breakfast? If so, the Pa vilion Snack Bar, located on the first floor of the Pavilion, is the perfect Everything here is grab and go. Most people are headed to class and don’t have time.” , _ ^ , —Loretta Sok, Bus Stop Superviser pit stop. Besides breakfast items, it features sandwiches, hamburgers, daily lunch specials. Blue Bell ice cream, snacks and drinks. Perhaps the busiest snack bar on campus is the Bus Stop Snack Bar in front of the Reed McDonald build ing. The structure, which was merely a bus stop four years ago, of ten has more students waiting in line outside the entrance than inside. Among the items served are break fast foods, hamburgers, salads, bev erages and other snacks. An ideal place to eat and relax, it provides outdoor seating where many students take breathers between classes. Loretta Sok, superviser of Bus Stop, said her facility serves students who usually are in a hurry. “Everything here is grab and go,” Sok said. “Most people are headed to class and don’t have time.” She said cheeseburgers, com dogs, egg rolls and Frito pies are the most common requests of students, while faculty members enjoy the snack bar’s fresh chef salads. “Most people enjoy our hamburg ers because they come through a broiler, not grilled like in other pla ces,” she said. Common Denominator Snack Bar, located in the Commons Resi dence Hall Complex, has breakfast, lunch and dinner items. Hamburgers and sandwiches, as well as specialty salads, dessert snacks and beverages are offered. Zachry Snack Bar, in The Zachry Engineering Center, provides pas tries, sandwiches, snack foods and beverages. Mickey Moeller, who manages Zachry, Bus Stop, Pavilion Snack Bar, Vet Snack Bar and Golf Course Snack Bar, said quickness has played a key role in many of the fa cilities’ popularity with customers. “They brag on the good quality food and say they’ve never been through a line faster,” Moeller said. The two newest eating facilities on campus are Ag CaFe and Pie Are Square. Ag CaFe is located on the first floor of the Biochemistry/Biophy sics Building on the west campus. The first eating facility for west cam pus, it too, offers daily specials, sandwiches, soup, a fresh fruit and salad bar, pizzas, hamburgers, des serts, snack foods and a variety of beverages. Ag stands for silver; Ca stands for calcium; and Fe stands for iron — an appropriate name for a thriving, healthy business. It fea tures a full line of breakfast and lunch cafeteria-style menu items. The cafe also also carries other items such as school supplies. Peggy Gideon, who manages Pie Are Square and Ag CaFe, said her locations are geared toward home- style cooking. “People are thrilled at our variety that’s offered,” Gideon said. “Inte raction has been terrific and our food is fresh and good.” Pie Are Square, located on te ground floor of the Civil Engi neering Building, offers a full line of breakfast and lunch cafeteria-style entrees. “I’ve had people from the tele phone company and construction workers tell me they’ve never had such good biscuits,” Gideon said, referring to the fresh ones made at Pie Are Square every day. “On some days, they come just to try our food, even when they’re not working on campus.” While A&M’s growth already has affected its demand of new eating lo cations, Smith said he projects be tween three and four more snack bars in the next 10 years. “We’re always upgrading,” he said. “On a campus our size, food and education have to fit together.” Smith said eating on campus is a good idea for several reasons. “You can’t get off this campus conveniently without wasting a lot of time,” he said. “There’s a loss of productivity when students eat off- campus.” Besides providing jobs for stu dents and non-students, on-campus dining halls provide a place where students can meet and socialize, Smith said. “It is an important part of college life,” he said. “There’s much more to life than what you get out of books.” Pizza • Stromboli • Calzone • Pizza Turnover • Pepperoni Rolls • Gourmet Pizza • Hot Sandwiches • Dinners • Entrees • Salads Large 16” 2 Toppings $6.99 + tax Exp. 12/15/89 Small 12” 2 Topping $4.99 + tax Exp. 12/15/89 cut here Defensive Driving Course Nov. 28, 29 & Dec. 6, 7 College Station Hilton For more information or to pre-register phone 693-8178 24 hours a day. cut here i We HAVE Cliffs Not Cliffs Notes answers your questions about literature as you study and review Each is designed to help improve your grades and save you time. 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