Che Battalion Clear with warming temperatures Vol. 66 No. 45 College Station, Texas Tuesday, November 17, 1970 Wednesday — Clea* to partly cloudy. Winds northerly 10-20 mph. Low 41°, high 58°. Thursday — Clear. Winds northerly 10-15 mph. Low- 36°, high 64°. Kyle Field — Friday night. Partly cloudy. Winds southerly 5 mph. 48°. 845-2226 Bonfire duties begin; pole up AGGIE PLAYERS do a scene from Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing:” which opened Monday night in Guion Hall. The play runs nightly at 8 through Friday. (Photo by Bob Cox) Last Guion Hall production Much Ado’ will run all week The Aggie Players' swan-song production in Guion Hall, William Shakespeare’s satire “Much Ado About Nothing,” opened Monday for five nights on the old stage loon to be scrapped. "It’s probably the last produc tion in historic Guion Hall,” “Much Ado” director C. K. Esten, who also heads the Aggie Players, uid. The English Department’s the ater arts section will be dispos sessed afterwards and Guion Hall, constructed in 1918 at a cost of (115,000, will be razed for Me morial Student Center expansion. “Much Ado About Nothing,” after appearing each night Nov. 16-20, will go on the road for a Saturday, Nov. 21, staging at the Schulenburg Civic Theater. Cur tain at Guion Hall will be at 8 p.m. each night. A satirical approach to hyp ocrisy in people, “Much Ado” deals with the love of Benedick, played by Pat Castle of Liberty, and Beatrice, portrayed by Lucy Gravett of Dickinson, compared to the shallow artificiality of others. . . for man is a giddy thing, and this is my conclusion,” com ments Benedick in a late scene, summing the central idea of the transitional Shakespeare pliay. "Giddy, as Shakespeare was ising it in 1592, meant artificial or deceitful,” explained Esten, as sisted in direction of the two-art H-member cast production by Celia Williams. "‘Much Ado’ stresses the arti ficiality. of speech, the use of too many words in an endeavor to hide real feelings, and shows People’s use of clothes as a fac- «le,” the director added. He said that observers laugh it a person or situation in a com edy, but in satire, the viewer really laughs at himself, recog- tizing that the gullibility por trayed on the stage reflects the fallibility of people. Esten’s wife, Lugean, Jean Linger, Rebecca Enloe and Sandy Sheats made colorful costumes to be used in the production. The a typical balconied Shakes pearean period structure, was de signed by Robert W. Wenck, as sistant Aggie Players director. The cast includes as Antonio, Paul Peterson; Balthasar, Carlos Carranco; Borachio, Kurt Miles; a boy, messenger and sexton, Ed mund Arranga; Claudio, Donald Daffron; Conrade, Bruce Baethge; Dogberry, James Dennis; Don John, Gordon Evans; Don Pedro, Students will study grade report effect annual Highway opens Tuesday in By SUE DAVIS Battalion Staff Writer The Liberal Arts Student Coun cil (LASC) voted Monday night to consider proposals to study the effectiveness of mid-semester grades and to make mid-semester and semester grades available di rectly to students. The council also established a Luedecke keynote speaker at session The 44th Short Course the Memorial Student Center. Jointly sponsored by the Texas Highway Department and A&M’s Texas Transportation Institute and Civil Engineering Depart ment, the three-day meeting will include 12 technical sessions deal ing with highway design, con struction, maintenance and re lated activities. Keynote speaker will be Gen. A. R. Luedecke, A&M executive vice president. The response will be made by Dewitt C. Greer of Austin, chair man of the Texas Highway Com mission and former state high way engineer. TTI Director Jack Keese, short course general chairman, said the opening session also will include presentation of the Gibb Gilchrist and Dewitt C. Greer Awards for outstanding THD service. The awards honoring the two former state highway engineers will be made by John S. Redditt of Lufkin. Redditt, former Texas Highway Commission chairman, is donor of the annual $1,000 awards. format for submitting proposals for study. A proposal must be presented typewritten to Vice President Jerry Hogwood at least one week before a scheduled council meet ing. It must contain reasons why the proposal should be considered by the council. The proposal must be in conjunction with the ob jectives of the council. These are: 1) to discuss problems concern ing students in the College of Liberal Arts and to recommend solutions to the dean (W. David Maxwell) of the college. 2) to provide students for stu dent-faculty committees author ized by the dean, and 3) to perform such other duties as are agreed upon by the dean of the college and the council. The LASC Rules Committee will then examine the proposal to determine if it meets these requirements. If the Rules Com mittee votes no on the proposal, an appeal may be made to the council the night of the next meeting, and a vote will be taken to decide if the council wants to work on it. If the proposal is passed by the Rules Committee, it will be pre sented by its originator to the entire council and voted upon. If it passes, the originator will head a committee of three other council members who will re search and make recommenda tions on the proposal. This committee will present a finished report at the following meeting. A vote will then be taken. If the proposal fails, it cannot be presented again that academic year. Audie Beeson; the friar, Mike MeCaskill. Also, as Hero, Mary Hanna; Leona to, Alec Horn; Margaret, Caroline Most; Ursula, Yvonne Schmitz; Verges, Robert Ander son; Watch 1, Stephen French, and Watch 2, Paul Peterson. Sets are the responsibility of crew Rene Richardson, Melanie Dennie, William Johnson, Lucy Egg, Anderson, Peterson and Mc- Caskill. The sound is handled by Me Caskill and Jean Linger, who also heads the house crew. MeCaskill also heads props and Miss Egg and Miss Dennis handle lights. By BRUCE BLACK Battalion Staff Writer Work is underway for the 1970 Texas Aggie Bonfire which will burn next Tuesday night. Company C-l and remaining members of the now disbanded Company D-l spliced sections of the huge centerpole and raised it last Wednesday. Major work will officially begin Saturday. Head yell leader Keith Chapman, in charge of over all operations, hopes to make the first work day 12 hours long, with Sunday and Monday reduced to eight hour shifts. Squadrons 3, 6 and 9, along with Moses and Davis Gary Halls, will work in the loading area. Mitchell, Legett, Hotard, and Companies A-2, C-2, F-2, K-l and two other outfits will work in the stacking area, while the Band will unload the trucks. All other units, including 12 halls and 21 corps outfits, will be at work in the cutting area. Tommy Butler will be in charge of cutting, Barrett Smith will head operations in the stacking area and Mark Olson will be in charge of overall civilian effort. “The emphasis this year will be on a sturdy, symetrical Bonfire,” Chapman said. “Safety will be the theme while working on the fire,” he continued. “Every outfit and hall will appoint one junior to record any accident and its cause, and ‘trouble shooters’ will be appoint ed to head off any accident before it can happen.” All drivers and equipment op erators will be thoroughly check ed before working. An all-out ef fort will be made to reduce any chance of an accident, he added. Speaking on ecology, Chapman said that construction of the Bon fire helps rather than hurts the land. “We can only use the large straight trees in the area,” he ex plained. “We leave the crooked trees, which provide most of the shade, and make more room for grass to grow, thus aiding the larger wildlife in the area.” “We don’t use all the trees,” he added. “Actually we use a lot of the little ones that are getting crowded out.” As no underbrush is destroyed in the project, no danger is plac ed on the smaller wildlife, he said. George Boyett, general man ager of Texas International Speedway (TIS), where the cut ting will be taking place, en dorses the work, and says that if the school does not thin the forest in this way, the speedway would have to. This year tree limbs and other scraps will be placed in large piles and disposed of by TIS, allowing more room for future vegetation. Enough trees will be left so that there is absolutely no threat of erosion or nature un balance, Chapman said. In reply to the Brazos County Environmental Action Council’s request to put trash on the Bon fire, Chapman said that the make up of the fire made this danger ous. He added, however, that trash could be burned in the numerous perimeter fires used in guarding the stack. Chapman said that there is not enough equipment to collect the trees from cutting areas. Presently, there are only two semi’s and two bob-tail trucks and two cherry-pickers guaran teed to the project. A total of 10 trucks are needed for total effi ciency, Chapman said, and several more cherry pickers are needed, along with farm tractors, fork lifts, and cranes. Chapman asks students to obtain this equipment by the end of the week. The names of all donors will be inscribed on a large sign in the stacking area, Chapman said. Alpha Phi Omega has donated $500 for bonfire work which in cluded purchase and transporta tion of the centerpole. Only juniors and seniors will be allowed to drive their cars to the cutting area, Chapman said. Then there must be six or seven pas sengers per car due to lack of parking space. All other person nel will be transported by truck. Safety lessons this week for bonfire workers A program to promote safety during Bonfire will be held to night in room 210 of the Military Science Building. Operating pro cedures will be outlined for chain saw operators and axe-handlers. Also procedures for procure ment of oil and gas for chain saws, as well as sharpening pro cedures for axes and chainsaws, will be discussed, Sam Olivarez, head of the Student ‘Y’ Associa tion first-aid crew said. According to Olivarez, safety precautions this year will be much more rigid than in years past. Olivarez urged all freshmen and sophomores to attend the safety film that is to be shown Thursday night, Nov. 19, at 7:15. After the film, Hughes Hall will demonstrate how to lift logs and load them on to a truck bed. Other safety precautions in clude having two ambulances for the cutting area and one for the stacking area. Two U - Haul trailers, provided free of charge by Andy Anderson’s Conoco Sta tion on College Ave. will serve as first - aid stations. Calloway- Jones will be handling any emer gencies that cannot be handled by the First Aid Crew. A separate safety committee, under Mark Riser, will keep sur veillance for accidents. Coeds organize for Bonfire service Co-eds interested in working on this year’s Bonfire who have not attended the University Women Bonfire planning meet ing should contact the Student “Y” Association secretary in Room 102 of the YMCA Build ing. Workers should leave their name, phone number, and the time that they will be available to work. The work will consist of handing out coffee and cookies with the Student “Y” Associa tion. IT’S UP! The bonfire cen terpole is in place. Bonfire construction will culminate with its burning next Tues day night at 7:30. (Photo by Bruce Black) Environmental design group to work on school not fire h HAYDEN WHITSETT Battalion News Editor A group of A&M students will ipend the traditional Monday Bonfire holiday repainting a tohool building rather than work- on the Bonfire. One of the buildings of the tohool, Travis Elementary in Bryan, is badly in need of re- forbishing, according to David Bacus, a freshman environmental fosign major and group spokes man. The group, hopefully to number about 50, will scrape and tyaint the building, now housing ‘cafeteria, reputty the windows »ud repaint trash receptacles on Hie grounds. University National Bank "On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. “We are not attacking the Bonfire,” said Dacus, “we are of fering an alternative. We just don’t think the Bonfire is a repre sentation of the student Com munity.” The project is one of three be ing worked on by students in the College of Architecture and En vironmental Design. The other two are refurbishing the Brazos County Girls Club and planting trees in the area. “The whole thing is being com munity financed,” said Dacus. “I’ve been asked not to say just who right now. The paint is be ing bought from Sherwin-Wil liams at a reduced rate.” About 30 people are sure they are coming and 30 others have said they would try to come, Dacus said. “We have Corps backing, but we’re afraid they might not come because they will be made to work on the Bonfire,” he added. The group, which is open to anybody who wishes to help, will wear T-shirts with “Good Guys” stenciled in red on the back. Dac us admitted that the shirts were not so much for trying to put across the idea of they being “good guys” as for “making things look good for TV people who are supposed to be there. “We think it is a very fine thing for the young people to do,” said A. O. Bowen, superin tendent of the Bryan schools, “and we commend them for their constructive spirit.” “They haven't asked for any help but we will if they need it,” he added. THE FIRST EDITION performed last Friday night at Town Hall. Players are Ken Vassey left), Mary Arnold, Terry Williams and leader Kenny Rogers. Mickey Jones is on drums. (Photo by Hayden Whitsett)