The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 10, 1969, Image 9

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Concrete Foundation Laid
For Dorm Service Complex
THE BATTALION
Wednesday, September 10, 1069 College Station, Texas
Page 9
We with
students
ory or-
' presi-
time to
uviliant
dividual [
it their
during
imc,
The foundation and a portion
of the concrete work for the $1
million 12 - dormitory services
building have been completed.
Located adjacent to Duncan
Dining Hall, the building will
house the Aggie Band’s practice
and office facilities, Corps uni
form storage-distribution facili
ties and cold-dry storage lockers
Aggieland, School Directory
Available at Services Building
Centrtl
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AGGIE OFFICERS COMMISSIONED
ley leaders of the 1969-70 Corps of Cadets headed by Cadet
Coloney Matthew R. Carroll (left) of Annandale, Va., and
Deputy Commander George I. Mason of San Antonio took
llie oath of office Monday. They headed 250 cadets at the
;ommanders conference. (See story page 1.)
Ag Players Offer
Satires, Comedies
The 1969 Aggieland and the
1969-70 university directory are
now available at the Student
Publications Office in the In
formation Services Building.
Information and Publications
Director Jim Lindsey noted this
year marks the first time the
directory has been published prior
to the start of fall classes.
A revised student section,
which will include listings for
students registering after mid-
August and reflect any reassign
ment of rooms, will be published
later in the fall. The section will
be furnished free to persons pre
senting coupons printed in the
original directory.
In addition to campus telephone
numbers, the directory includes
classifications, majors and home
towns of students and titles and
home addresses and telephone
numbers for faculty-staff.
Besides the Student Publica
tions Office, the directory is on
sale at the Exchange Store, the
Memorial Student Center gift
shop, Shaffers University Book
Store and local banks.
The 528-page Aggieland is
available to students who were
enrolled full time at A&M last
spring and present their univer
sity identification cards. Other
persons may purchase the year
book for $7.50 per copy.
for the Food Service Department.
The structure is scheduled for
completion next spring.
Planned as a one story building
with a partial basement, the fa
cility will contain approximately
36,000 square feet. It will have
a combination masonry and con
crete exterior.
Loading docks for laundry, uni
forms and food storage will face
Lewis Street, across from the
drill field where the Thanksgiving
bonfire is constructed.
Construction Manager Harold
Carter said the basement will
take up about two-thirds of the
area under the structure, but the
additional space has been exca
vated for possible expansion.
Food storage freezers will be lo
cated in the basement.
The band complex will include
a large practice room of about
8,400 square feet, 12 private prac-
time rooms, two ensemble practice
rooms, a control room and sound
and recording, library and instru
ment repair areas, receptionist
secretary office and the director’s
office.
Fall Semester to End Earlier
In 1970-71 Academic Calendar
The university’s 1970-71 academic valendar will have a
number of changes, most notable of which will be comple
tion of the fall semester before the Christmas holidays.
To accomplish this and avoid the two-week class break
immediately before semester final exams, classes will begin
earlier and conclude for the spring semester during mid-
May, 1971.
Class dates for the fall, 1970, semester will be from
August 31 to December 11. Fall commencement will be on
December 12 and finals will be written December 16-22.
In line with the adjusted dates, delayed registration, adds
and drops will be completed August 24-28, 1970, and new
students will be able to file application for admittance up
to August 15.
The spring semester, 1971, will run from January 11 to
May 15, registration, commencement and finals inclusive.
Commencement and final review will be moved up almost a
month to May 8 and spring finals will be May 10-15.
The change will not affect the 1969-70 school year.
Semester of the the upcoming term will run from Septem
ber 8 to January 24 and January 26, 1970 to May 30, respec
tively.
Alpha Zeta Selling Desk Calendars
Calendar notebooks for the
1969-70 school year are now be
ing sold on campus by Alpha
Zeta, national agricultural honor
fraternity, to finance service
projects and scholarships award
ed by the group.
The maroon, plastic-bound desk
calendars contain pictures of the
students and campus of Texas
A&M and sell for $1.50.
Satire, comedy and Erskine
Caldwell are 1969-70 entertain-
nent offerings by the Aggie
Players.
Director C. K. Esten announced
the thespian group’s major pro-
iuctions this year are “Denny and
the Witches,” “Tobacco Road,”
‘Under the Sycamore Tree” and
"Barefoot in the Park.”
The Aggie Players also will
present the annual Christmas
show, “The Curate’s Play,” and
j children’s theater show.
Casting tryouts for “Denny and
the Witches,” William Gibson’s
satire concerning man in the
itomic age, will be conducted
Monday and Tuesday, according
to Bob Wenck. The director said
the first production will be pre
sented Oct. 14-16 and 23-25.
Jack Kirkland’s adaptation of
the Erskine Caldwell-authored
hook, “Tobacco Road,” will be
statged Dec. 9-13. The play ran
tight years on Broadway, a record
until “My Fair Lady” came along.
“Under the Sycamore Tree,”
March 11-13 and 19-21, is Samuel
Spewack’s treatment of man and
his aspirations from the view
point of the lowly ant. “Barefoot
in the Park,” April 30-May 2 and
May 7-9, is about a new lawyer
md his young bride. It is written
hy Neil Simon.
The Aggie Players consist of
from 30 to 60 students interested
in theater arts.
“They are primarily students in
our theater arts courses,” Wenck
said, “but we welcome all students
and never have enough. Any A&M
Neutrons Aid
Cancer Study
At Cyclotron
The highest-energy neutrons
ever employed in a biological ex
periment will be used in a cancer
research project this week at
A&M’s giant cyclotron.
The tests will be conducted by
Dr. James T. Brennan, the Uni
versity of Pennsylvania’s profes
sor of research radiology.
Dr. Brennan, who has utilized
the nuclear installation on several
other occasions, will be joined
this week by Dr. Roger J. Berry,
professor of radiobiology at Ox
ford University’s Churchill Hos
pital.
Dr. i. A. McIntyre, associate
director of the Cyclotron Institute,
said specific purpose of the cur
rent series of tests is to investi
gate use of high-energy neutrons
for treatment of cancer.
He noted the neutron beam
from the cyclotron will be used
to bombard mice, as well as tumor
cells taken from the mice.
“The irradiated cells will then
he used to inoculate normal mice
with varying number of the cells
to determine the effectiveness of
the cyclotron neutrons for de
stroying the cancer cells,” Mc
Intyre explained.
Dr. Brennan was the first off-
campus user of the multi-million-
dollar A&M cyclotron, or “atom
smasher” as it is often called.
A cyclotron is a device used to
accelerate charged particles to
high energies for bombardment
of various types of targets in
order to study the nuclear proper
ties of the material.
student is eligible to participate.”
All production except the
Christmas show are presented in
Guion Hall. The Aggie Players
and theater arts section of the
English Department are quar
tered in the basement of Guion
Hall, next door to the Fallout
Theater.
Wenck said “Denny” tryouts
begin at 7:30 p.m. Monday and
Tuesday and will be conducted
in the Fallout Theater.
The Emphasis is on 'U r at
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