? in the ttle against y” received approaches ^ Sociolo. ivleskythi s methods to group, aspects oi °f these s > aspirj. ad relative mged. ^&M’s tint Workshop little ques. mde of the both tie ■ However, lack effe. 1 ■t can help >f develop ielp these ? meaning. , determin- nd develop 3 for meet- iesky said, rty is ex- mphasired. peaker, Dr. researcher- mil'ies need etencies roductivel)’ must It I n earning, I orting gov-f d receiving I ng’ in com-j rating rej itive uses, | services ii I using oil individual I educating | their coni me demon I -ated in the I ■ ® More Campus Productions Eyed Esten Predicts Better Year For Aggie Players, Theater THE BATTALION Thursday, September 2, 1965 College Station, Texas Page 7 CAMPUS BRIEFS More campus theater produc tions than ever before is the forecast for 1965-66 from C. K. Esten, sparkplug and director of Texas A&M’s growing program in theater arts. The “student oriented” Fallout Theater-Workshop will be in its first full year of operation. The Aggie Players, a campus-com munity group, has four produc tions scheduled. More may be added. Esten said the Aggie Players will stage Arthur Miller’s “Death of A Salesman” for six nights starting Nov. 8. The spring pro duction set for March 21 through 26 is “The Time of Your Life” by William Saroyan. The Players also plan to take a short Christmas play, “The Other Wise Man,” to area churches in December. The tra ditional “Aggie Follies” will be staged in May. The Fallout Theater-Workshop with 36 student - directed plays staged since opening March 30 also will be busy. More than 1,500 persons have attended pro ductions in the basement theater under the Guion Hall stage. The 150-seat, air conditioned theater is housed in an official Civil Defense shelter area. The workshop was opened after Esten casually remarked the area might Pinkie Says June, July and August were big months for visitors to Texas A&M. P. L. (Pinkie) Downs Jr. re ports 11,721 visitors to the cam pus during the three-month period. He said 22 different groups toured the campus in August. Downs said the visitors were attending short courses, confer ences, class reunions and other meetings. A&M had 1,003,734 visitors in the jast 16 years and 3 months, Downs noted. He estimated they spent $21,078,414 in the communi ty. make a pretty good campus the ater. “The next thing I knew stu dents had painted the area, strung some lights and had it ready for use,” Esten said. “Students who have written original plays of any length are invited to use the Fallout The ater-Workshop as a showcase for their work,” Esten said. Other students who want to direct or work with productions also are invited to participate, he noted. Six Aggies have written, di rected and produced their own plays in the basement theater. Nearly 200 Aggies have helped stage plays there. Esten describes the theater- workshop as “a place that imagi natively combines fun and cul ture.” Students enrolled in Esten’s Theater Arts 383, “Techniques of Directing,” use the Fallout The ater-Workshop for their produc tions. This fall Esten also will teach Theater Arts 378, “Teach ing and Attitudes of Acting.” Magazine Grants $1,000 To Journalism Department AGGIE PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEER Cecil Bourne, 1965 graduate of Texas A&M, has com pleted 10 weeks training with the Peace Corps at Atlanta University. He is now at home in Marquez, Tex., on leave. He leaves Sept. 11 for Ghana, where he will teach math and science in secondary schools and teacher training col leges. Observers have found huge areas of the Indian Ocean—as large as 75,000 square miles— covered by millions of tons of dead fish. The Department of Journalism has been awarded a $1,000 Read er’s Digest Foundation grant to finance student travel and re search. Delbert McGuire, head of the department, said research will involve public affairs reporting and advanced magazine writing assignments. He said part of the maximum grant will be used to send reporting students to visit the state legislature in Austin and to interview state official. y, Campml y Foundal e addition! ray to t!it| if. Associatel ic Wesley J Lion to f I as pasta I Methodist j duties at | on Wed- ;helor of Oklahoma > Bachelor j a Perkins Southern | idth addi- it George | r°. ieir fi'’ ! j e parson- Vtethodist mmunitj' Adminis- sentative Static" ext Wed- ious SBA m. to 5 i seeing -yan-Col- of Com- appoint- ©IBSON’S DISCOUNT CENTER SPECIALS GOOD THUR. FRL SAT. SEPT. 2, 3, 4. Deluxe Design Sports BICYCLE Tons of Extras. Boys or Girls. 24 or 26 inch Models 9648, 9649-9449-9448. •luggage cartier • Chrome fenders and rims ’ VCoaster Brake SEAMLESS NYLONS 15-Denier. Sizes 8^4 - 11 *28 88 5 States Represented In Engineer Meet Ten engineers from five states are on campus this week for a week-long short course on the application of symmetrical com ponents. Professor Lewis M. Haupt, Jr. of the electrical engi neering department is directing the course. Earlier this month he taught a basic course to 18 engineers. •Deluxe Tank Chrome headlight •Narrow White Sidewall Tires BY HUFFY Redmond Terrace SHOPPING CENTER College Station Highway 6, South Open 9 a. m. To 9 p. m. All Prices Plus Tax Where Applicable Ladies Hand Sewn & Boys Black Leather LOAFERS Ladies, sizes 4-10 B. Boys, sizes 2^-6 D. Yale Combination Padlock Rust resistant No. HC34-515. $1.59 Value Yale Rocket Warded Padlock No. HC 29-249. 75*? Value Tuck MASKING TAPE Big 2” x 60 ft. rolls. Compare at $2.00 ^mHlllfefc. Buy Your MONEY] Money Orders ORDERS I At GIBSON’S Softex FACIAL TISSUE 2 Ply - 400 Sheets — 25^ Value Charmin BATH TISSUE Package of 4 rolls — 39^ Value 18*? 29*? 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Sizes 4 to 16 *1 47 i GIBSONS FILLER PAPER 300 Sheets 2 or 3 hole. 98^ Value PAY YOUR PHONE BILL AT GIBSON’S COURTESY DESK Symmetrical components are a mathematical method of analyz ing electrical circuit conditions. States represented include Ala bama, Indiana, Louisiana, Okla homa and Texas. Accident Control To Be Studied Here A three-day seminar, the ABC’s of Industrial Accident Control, is scheduled September 13-15 at Texas A&M. Members of the supervisory development division of the spon soring Engineering Extension Service and John Hill, director of personnel insurance and safe ty at A&M, will teach techniques of setting up accident prevention programs. The course is for industrial employes who head safety pro grams on a “part time” basis and for those who have recently en tered accident prevention work full-time. 6 Preps Win NSF-A&M Awards Certificates were presented Friday to 68 outstanding high school students completing a six- week program at Texas A&M. The National Science Foundation and A&M sponsored the studies for 36 students in geology and 32 in mathematics and data pro cessing. A&M President Earl Rudder spoke to the “graduates” and an nounced the winners of six schol arships worth $400 each. Four alternate winners also were named. “I wish I had scholarships to give to each of you because we know you are all outstanding students,” President Rudder said. He complimented them for their achievements. The students are returning to high schools across the nation for additional studies. The summer program is plan ned to enrich a superior student’s background. Named as winners from the 36- student geology group were: Shelby A. Meadows of Houston, Earnest R. Stern of Levelland and William J. Finane of Longview. Winners in the 32-student math and data processing group were David Alan Demus of Canyon, Danton B. Spivey of Houston and Walter H. Guth of Tinker AFB, Okla. Biology Prof Gets Oyster Study Grant $16,317 grant for extension of a three-year oyster study has been awarded to Dr. John G. Mackin, head of the Department of Biology. Mackin said the research is to determine how an oyster disease which causes millions of dollars in losses along the Gulf and East Coast of the United States, is transmitted. Co-investigator is Dr. Sammy Ray, director of the Texas A&M Marine Laboratory in Galveston. Four graduate students are also working on the project. Dr. Raymond Reiser Leaves For Europe Dr. Raymond Reiser, professor in the Department of Biochemis try and Nutrition, will partici pate in technical meetings in September which will take him through much of Europe. He will attend the Conference on the Biochemical Problems of Lipids Sept. 5-10 in Noordwijk, PARDNER Vou’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Done CAMPUS CLEANERS Holland, and a symposium on Drugs Affecting Lipid Metabo lism Sept. 12-15 in Milan, Italy. Reiser will discuss advances in lipid (fats) metabolism at the conferences. The scientist’s next stop will be the laboratories of the Insti tute of Physiology at the Czecho slovak Academy of Science in Prague, Czechoslovakia. He will inspect the institute’s facilities and discuss with Dr. P. Hahn and his staff their studies on lipid metabolism in the very young. Beasley Appointed To Police Board Wallace Beasley, A&M coor dinator for law enforcement training, has been named to the new state commission on law enforcement standards and educa tion. Gov. John Connally appointed Beasley and eight others to serve on the commission which will di rect research in law enforcement, certify law enforcement train ing and education programs and certify instructors for the pro grams. It will also recommend curricu la for advanced courses and semi nars in law enforcement at in stitutions of higher education. Beasley will serve a four-year term. 2 Aggies Receive Masters At Harvard Charles Louis Blaschke and Jack Newton McCrary, who re ceived their bachelor degrees from Texas A&M, have been awarded master of business ad ministration degrees from Har vard University. Blaschke finished A&M in 1963, McCrary in 1959. Joseph Eubank Joins Engineering Service Joseph E. Eubank has joined the Texas A&M Engineering Ex tension Service as an instructor in the heavy equipment operator and maintenance training pro gram. Alvin W. Jones, chief instruc tor in the program, announced Eubank’s addition. A native of Palestine, Eubank earned as associate in science de gree in civil technology from the University in 1963 and has varied experience in the construction in dustry. He is also a graduate of A&M’s Heavy Equipment Op erator’s School. The Centerville High School graduate, his wife and child live in the Darling Trailer Park, Highway 21 East, Bryan. 25 Texas Contractors End 2-Day Seminar Twenty - five mechanical con tractors from wide areas of Texas completed a two - day training seminar Wednesday as instruc tors for a new school of Texas A&M’s Engineering Extension Service. They are members of the Me chanical Contractors Associations of Texas who will teach in the Specialty Contractors Project Manager Training School of the Engineering Extension Service. R. L. Patrick, coordinator for the program, said the school trains construction superinten dents for mechanical contractors. B. M. Hackney and W. B. Mans field of TEES stressed teaching methods and discussion leading in the 12-hour seminar at Bryan’s Holiday Inn. The specialty school begins Sept. 20 and continues through March 4. Students will be trained in business and job management related academic subjects and principles of supervision. Patrick said the contractors will alternate in teaching. Forty- six professional contractors will teach in the 23-week school. Plans call for two sessions of the school each year. Patrick expects electrical, roofing and other types of contractors to join the program eventually. Mitvlcc^rl Supply 'Piclu/te. 923 SaCo!ItgeAv*-Bryan,Tejtos College Master National Leader In Sales to the College Man Fidelity Union Life Ins. Co.