r Weather! Clear to partly cloudy Wed nesday; partly cloudy Thursday. High both days mid-90’s. Low tonight 74. Che Battalion Inside Pollution detector p. 6 Turbines p. 7 Defense .p. 9 Vol. 68 No. 126 College Station, Texas Wednesday, July 9, 1975 fcliiiiihiiliBilitaiMi'utilities compromise likely Degree deadline set Degree application deadline for the second summer session is Friday, July 18. Students who expect to be graduated this summer must file for the degree by the deadline. Registrar Robert Lacey said applications must be made by graduate and undergraduate stu dents. He noted that the application is the responsibility of the graduating student. Applications are taken in the Richard Coke Building, after payment of an $8 graduation fee in the Fiscal Office. Under graduates make formal application by presenting fee receipts in Room 7. Graduate student applications are taken in the office of the Graduate College, Room 209. Summer commencement, with Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives Bill Clayton as speaker, will be Aug. 15. Funds total reported New research funds for TAMU totaled $1,856,802 during June, bringing the cumulative total for fiscal year 1974-75 up to $32,984,054. The College of Science had the largest influx of funds last month, $808,060, most of which came in the form of grants from the Welch Foundation to 38 professors for chemistry projects. The College of Engineering was second in the Office of Univer sity Research’s monthly tabulations, with $610,342, followed by Agriculture, $306,447; Geosciences, $78,532, and Liberal Arts, $53,421. TAMU ranks 18th on the National Science Foundation’s list of the leading universities in research and development expendi tures. Pool to open soon Wofford Cain Olympic Pool should be back in operation in about two weeks, Dr. C. W. Landiss, head of the Health and Physical Education Department, announced Tuesday. The swimming pool has been closed because of clouded water. Landiss said Dr. William L. Hoover, state chemist who is based on campus, analyzed the water and determined the problem was the result of a chemical reaction between lime that blew over from the adjacent parking lot construction and the paint applied to the pool earlier in the season. The manufacturer of the paint has agreed to prepare a special mixture and apply it at no cost to the university, Landiss noted. He said the July 24 target date is dependent on favorable weather conditions. Color film movie “The Imperfect Miracle,’ a film about custom still color photography, will be shown by the MSC Camera Committee on July 14 at 7:30 p.m. in the Rudder Center Forum. The film features Ulric Meisel of Dallas, and will be followed by a discus sion of the new darkroom facilities in the MSC. Interested persons are invited to attend. Refrigerators due Students may turn in their refrigerators in the basement of the old hospital from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. until this Friday. Re frigerators will also be available for rent at $6 for the second summer term, with a $10 deposit. Registration set Registration for the second summer term will be held to morrow in Duncan Dining Hall. Students whose last name begin with “H” through “O” will register from 8 to 9:15 a.m., “P” through “Z” from 9:15 to 10:45, and “A” through “G” from 10:45 to 12:00. After enrolling for classes, students will turn in fee assessments and assignment-class cards in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Classes will begin Friday after fees are paid in the coliseum. Piano rooms open Four piano practice rooms are now open for student use in the Memorial Student Center basement. One room will be available strictly on a reservation basis (Call 845-6942). The other three rooms will be on a first come, first served basis. A student needs to show his or her ID card of a current fee slip to use these facilities. Auditions scheduled Auditions for “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown,” the second dinner theater production this summer, will be held Thursday and Friday in the MSC ballroom. Players are needed to fill three male and two female parts. The part of Snoopy will be chosen on ability alone, regardless of gender. Rehearsals will start Friday, with the play being staged July 31 and August 1, 7, and 8. Tickets are nowon sale in the Rudder Center Box Office. “Bus” tickets on sale Tickets are available in the Rudder Center Box Office for the presentation of “Bus Stop” by the Premier Players. They play will be performed at 8 p.m. on July 10-12 in the Rudder Center Forum, and all seats will cost $1.00. Grove opens Friday Friday night will see “Bonnie and Clyde” return to the A&M campus, as the Grove reopens its movie series after a break for the holidays and first term exams. Saturday night’s film will be “The Owl and the Pussycat”. “Zachariah” will be shown Sunday. Mlart seeks books The Student Government Book Mart is seeking used books. It will be open every day this week. Students should go to the second floor of the MSC, in rooms 216 A, B, andE, to either sell or to buy used books. The Book Mart will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Councils to vote on proposal By JERRY NEEDHAM City Editor A College Station subcommittee on electrical utilities met with a Bryan subcommittee last Wednes day to try to iron out disagreements over the utilities rate increase. Lloyd Joyce, Bryan mayor, said, “We came out of the meeting with the understanding that they (the College Station City Council) would come back with some type of new proposal.” Councilman Jim Dozier, of Col lege Station, yesterday said, “I will make a motion presenting a counter-proposal to the city of Bryan at the Thursday night (Col lege Station City Council) meeting. We think we have an agreement that this particular subcommittee can live with. None of the subcommittee mem bers would reveal what figures the new proposal might offer but there were indications the figure will be a compromise between the two cities offers. “If we have room to give in work ing with them it’s probably in the water rather than the electricity,” said Joyce. Dozier said, “The whole con troversy arises over the cost of sup plying electricity to the city of Col lege Station. If a new proposal is submitted, Joyce said the Bryan Council will meet on Saturday or early next week to act on it. According to Dozier and Joyce, if either council does not approve a new proposal the matter will end up in court. “I think the future of the two cities lies together,” said Dozier. “I think if College Station went to other sources it would drive a wedge between the two cities which would be impossible to remove in the future. We could go to court and have a great deal of difficulty and we would still not have a working ar rangement with Bryan when the contract expires. Gary Halter, College Station councilman, who was not at the meeting and was unaware of any ag reements reached at the meeting said, “I think the offer we made was more than fair. Their demands for an increase are vague and unsatis factory, and I will vote against any increase other than what we have offered.” All America selections in full bloom Flowers in the TAMU Floral Test Garden remain fresh even in July heat. The test garden is located on the southern edge of the campus near the Educa tional Television Building. Photo by Tom Kaysei TAMU to train utility workers as U.S. accepts nuclear power The United States is on the threshold of a nuclear power- production age. TAMU’s Nuclear Science Center, with its research reactor, is expected to be a major facility for training people to work in the field. Non-nuclear engineers from var ious Texas utilities already have re ceived a firmer grasp of many fun damental principles following train ing on the research reactor. The TAMU reactor can also simultaneously accommodate a large number of experiments. As a result, irradiation services are pro vided to other colleges and univer sities, hospitals and research cen ters, governmental agencies and commercial and private organiza tions. “Since the reactor has been in op eration, it has provided services to 24 university departments, 92 other colleges and universities, eight gov ernmental agencies and 45 com mercial organizations. Last year a total of 6,166 samples were ir radiated for all users,” said Dr. John Randall, director of the Nuclear Science Center. “The reactor core, which isn’t much bigger than a breadbox is sus pended from a movable bridge in a water-filled, 150,000-gallon pool, Randall said. “The reactor can be moved next to a window in the large end of the pool to provide radiation to a large exposure room. The room can be used to irradiate large ani mals, a group of small animals or complete engineering systems to study the effect of mixed radiation on their performance.” Radiations provided by the reac tor can be classified as fast neutrons. thermal neutrons and gamma rays. Fast neutrons are produced directly by fission. After undergoing a number of collisions, the fission neutrons lose energy until they are in thermal equilibrium with the pool water. These are called ther mal neutrons. Gamma rays are pro duced directly by fission and by the radioactive decay of the fission pro ducts in the fuel elements. “Isotopes produced at the center are used in many ways, Randall said. “Many of the isotopes are used in tracer experiments. Spectrometer may be used as cancer detector The assault on cancer and heart attacks is being aided by a one-of-a- kind device at TAMU. The world’s largest Mass Spec trometer, called “Maggie” (Mass Analyzer of Gossamer Groups of Ionized Entities), may hold the sec ret to detecting many diseases even before symptoms appear to the vic tim. “Maggie,” according to head ol the research group, Dr. R. D. Mac- Farlane, can take a blood sample and simultaneously analyze it for 1,000 different chemicals. “Currently, we are studying vari ous biological molecules that have potential use for cancer therapy,” MacFarlane said. “We re analyzing samples of anti-tumor drugs from all over the world. “As scientists develop and refine new drugs, they inject them into mice and look for anti-tumor activ ity,” he said. “If it is spotted they ship the drug to us to analyze so they will know exactly what they’ve got. “This research group is also studying a class of neuro-toxins found in a species of frogs in Central America that has medical applica tions,” MacFarlane said. “This toxin will be used in the study of heart disease. With it at any time a re searcher can stimulate a heart attack in an animal so the heart attack can be studied. “This is the only spectroscope in the world that can study these com pounds, so right now we have a uni que capability, he said. The 30-foot-long machine of aluminum and steel has been in op eration about a year and a half. Monday the Energy Research and Development Administration notified TAMU that the project had been funded an additional $38,000. With “Maggie,” a routine blood test can be turned into a complete analysis that can be compared with known disease patterns. Early iden tification of the chemicals associated ,with a disease, can lead to earlier treatment. The device uses irradiation for identifying chemical molecules and biological compounds. The time of flight of the resulting ion down the 30-foot tube allows measurements as fine as one-tenth of one-billionth of a second. This in turn, allows ac curate identification of molecules. The device is so sensitive that local radio station interference had to be shielded from the wiring on the instrument. The magnetic pull of the earth carried the ion com pletely out of the tube and necessi tated the use of an anti-magnetic shield. Finally, an energized wire was run the length of “Maggie” to induce a spiral orbit of the ion around the wire to get it to the end of the tube. “We have developed a new ap proach which solves the problems of isolation of individual molecules that are fragile and break easily when exposed to heat. We have ob tained data on well-known molecules such as cholesterol, vit amins, and various amino acids to demonstrate that this technique is indeed one which can be used to obtain structure information on biologically important molecules,” MacFarlane said. Project members include Mac Farlane, Dr. David Torgerson, Dr. Kunja Chung and Raymond Skoronski. “A classic example of this is the irradiation of a piston ring, ” he said. “When this radiactive piston ring is placed in an operating engine, the radioactivity picked up in the oil can be used to determine the amount of wear on the ring with great accua- racy. “Another more recent application is putting radioactive tracers in oil-well piping to measure the cor rosion rate of pipe that is imbedded as much as three miles below the earth’s surface in an acidic environ ment of high temperature and pres sure,” Randall said. “Neutron radiography is also done here at TAMU, he said. “It is very sensitive to the lighter ele ments like hydrogen. Neutron radiography is so sensitive that it can detect a tiny drop of water through several inches of lead. “An example of an important use today is to insure that plastic items are properly located inside metal devices after manufacture, ” Randall said. “An example is the inspection of explosive bolts such as those used to close hatch covers on spacecraft to insure the plastic explosive is in deed in the device and in proper contact with the fuse. “These examples show that the research reactor at TAMU has a wide variety of uses in research, de velopment, and routine quality con trol and inspection,” he said. “There are undoubtedly many other problems that could be solved by the nuclear facilities. It only re quires that someone with an inquir ing mind ask, Ts it possible that nuc lear technology could solve this problem?’ 1 Plane lands on campus polo field The TAMU Flying Club brought one of its planes to campus to advertise a member ship drive. The plane was land ed Monday on the Polo field and pushed in front of Krueger- Dunn Dormitory by club mem bers. Photo by Tom Kayser J