THE BATTALION TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1978 Page 7 Campus Activities ^ • sr-in forces senta- How. sntrol : )ckell denv o the d him yidei s > lie ain is klanii latei indi r was t. He s and etary 1 that exans even ycor- inde- erinj em- have odol only iding ition, the nger imed ; the Tuesday English Department, "Northorp Frye”, North Texas State University Lab Band, lecture, 2 p.m., 510 Rudder Arts Committee, Rudder Auditorium, 8 Wednesday p.m. Dance Arts Society Performance, Forum, 8 p.m. International Folk Dancers, 7:30 p.m., Iranian Students Association, lawyer 201 MSC speaks on political situation in Iran, 8 p.m., 701 Rudder Political Forum, “John Hill", 7 p.m., 504 TAMU Scuba Club, 7:30 p.m., 607 Rud- Rudder der a KAMiililM IMP APARTMENTS ATTENTION APARTMENT HUNTERS! SUMMER LEASES “30% DISCOUNT” You can SAVE up to $374.00 when you sign a summer lease. Please come by today and see how much we can help you save. Furnished & Unfurnished Efficiency, 1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments All Utilities Included No Escalation Clause or Fuel Adjustment Charge 24 Hour Emergency Maintenance Service Two' Swimming Pools Tennis Courts Party/Meeting Room Health Spas, including Saunas for Men & Women Three Laundry Rooms Rental office open Monday through Friday 9-6 Saturday 10-5 Sunday 2-5 693-1110 1501 Hwy. 30 693-1011 APRIL 25, 1978 $1.75 COVER Tuesday Nite Fever $50 DISCO DANCE CONTEST 25c BEER 112 PRICE BAR DRINKS Battalion Classified Call 845-2611 Building gets prize A&M’ new architectural building was named Inc., features an interior courtyard, skylights as an award winner by an engineering council and precast concrete with a sandblasted ex- for its innovative design. The building, de- posed aggregate finish, signed by Datum Structures Engineering, The Texas A&M University School of Architecture’s new build ing has been cited as an award win ner by the Consulting Engineers Council of Texas. The council presented this year’s Texas Engineering Excellence Awards to four firms, including Datum Structures Engineering, Inc., of Dallas for its design of the College Station facility. The Texas Engineering Excel lence Awards are presented each year by the council in recognition of engineering achievements demon strating the highest degree of merit land ingenuity in contributing to technical, economic or social ad vancement. The awards were presented Fri day at the council’s annual awards luncheon in the Houston Oaks Hotel. Displays of the award winning projects Monday began a tour of five Texas cities which lasts until Dec. 9. The Texas A&M building is a 4-story, 102,000-square foot struc ture, composed primarily of precast concrete with a sandblasted exposed aggregate finish. It features an interior courtyard on all four stories, extensive use of skylights and a system of bridges and cantilevered stairs to traverse the courtyard. Exposed concrete was used for both interiors and exteriors of the building to reflect permanence and stability, reduce finishing costs, provide for low maintenance and energy requirements and blend with existing campus structures. It also was used to create a contem porary, bold appearance which will encourage creativity from the occu pants. Plttnncd liquid helium 'plumt will need only 8 to operate GIVE YOUR CAR A TUNE AND GO HOME WITH A SMILE FROM Includes: Labor Points Plugs Condenser Rotor Air Filter Fuel Filter PCV Valve Breather Filter Adj. of Choke Adj. of Carburator Adj. of Dwell & Timing TUN . E . •' CAR HURRY St SAVE United Press International BUSHTON, Kan. — Union Car bide Corp. has announced plans to build the world’s largest liquid helium plant in this small central Kansas town and become the largest supplier of helium by mid-1979. The $7 million plant will be able to liquefy 300 million cubic feet of helium annually, said Robert D. Kennedy, the president of the Union Carbide division that will be operating the plant. The plant is to be built on land adjacent to and rented from North ern Helex Co., a subsidiary of Northern Natural Gas Co., and will use crude helium bought from Northern. Union Carbide spokesman De- ALL FOR UNDER *40 *2 DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS /F IHop Does it on Tuesday Nites (10:00 p.m.-2:00 a.m.) (With This Ad & ID Card) Expires May 17, 1978 All Tune-ups Are Guaranteed 3313 S. College Ave. 822-5502 Call For An Appointment Cheese Omelette Special $1 69 (3 EGG CHEESE OMELETTES & 3 PANCAKES) Mon. 12-7 Tues.-Fri. 9-7 Sat. 8-6 When it's a big occasion, don't settle for anything less than a tuxedo rented from Aggie Cleaners 111 College Main College Station We also specialize in: General Dry Cleaning Uniforms Alterations & Repairs AGGIE "Kadar tickles laughs out of the audience and squeezes tears out of us in this charming story" LIZ SMITH - Cosmopolitan HllIKAjyil llllb Id / a wonderful movie la the whole family to see together, and my own children enjoyed it, it has the kind of appeal that adults warm to more than children because we can appreciate it on several levels—as parents, as children and as grandchildren " LYNN MINTON-McCalls "Yossi Yadin is superb: ’ MN GUAflINO - Daily News "A delightful Him and an unusual one, a true delight:' .JEFFREY LYONS- CBS Radio Tuesday April 25 8 p.m. Rudder Theater If you see only 1 film this year it should be LIES BUY FATHER TOLD ME. TLies “Magically created with alt its charm, poignancy, humor and heartache. A magnificent film After you see it, you'll find it impossible to shake out of your mind or heart!’ AARON SCH1N01ER- Family Circle “LIES MY FATHER TOLD ME is a warm and funny and touching tale!' JUDITH CRIST - Saturday Review “Under Jan Kadar's sensitive guidance, this journey back to lost youth but touchingly modestly reveals people as authentic as the settings in which An they are captured.” AH WELER-NY fiMES step into the m/c nnis Holt said the plant will be computer-automated, needing only eight workers. Holt said the plant will purify and liquefy the helium by compression and cooling, and will store the non-flammable, non explosive and non-toxic product in a planned 32,000-gallon tank. Last year Union Carbide built a helium purification plant with a daily capacity of 300,000 cubic feet at Bushton — about 30 miles north east of Great Bend — and has been marketing the gaseous helium since. With the addition of the liquid helium plant, Holt said, Union Car bide will become the nation’s lead ing supplier of helium. Helium, one of the lightest gases and difficult to liquefy, is extracted from supercooled natural gas. About 95 percent of the time, helium is used in gaseous forms for such things as a breathing mixture for deep-sea divers, as pressuring and purging systems in the space pro gram, for cooling vacuum surfaces and as a shielding gas to prevent fires in certain welding applications. Laser fusion breakthrough sparks hope United Press International LOS ALAMOS, N.M. — The successful testing of a powerful laser may be a breakthrough in develop ing a virtually inexhaustible energy source from a chemical found in seawater, report scientists at Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory. “This was a major step toward de veloping the data we need to ac complish the laser fusion goal,” said Jim McNally, associate division leader of the LASL’s laser division. The eight-beam carbon dioxide laser, tested April 12, gave scientists hope in their work with fusion reac tion, which can generate energy from deuterium. Deuterium is an element found in seawater, and generated energy from the virtually inexhaustible matter could answer much of the world s future energy needs. A second phase of testing the de vice is scheduled within nine months, when the beam will be fo cused on a tiny pellet of deuterium and tritium. Tritium is an element produced during the fusion reac tion. Scientists hope that when the in tense laser beam is focused on the tiny fuel pellet, it will be condensed into extremely dense matter and will produce a fusion reaction generating heat. The heat from the fusion reaction could theoretically be used to power electrical generators. McNally said successful testing of the device was important because it will lead to practical experiments to confirm calculations for creating fu sion reactions with lasers. “Until now, we just haven’t had machines with high enough power to get the experimental data in hand to verify the calculations,” he said. The laser delivered a beam equal to 15 trillion watts for less than a billionth of a second — in contrast to the nation’s total electrical generat ing capacity of half a trillion watts. The 15 trillion watt laser is the prelude to an even more powerful laser which scientists hope will be a “break-even” device. In theory, the break-even device woidd produce more than enough energy needed to operate the lasers which bombard the fuel pellet. “This machine tested April 12 will very definitely help us toward de velopment of a break-even device,’ said McNally. “We are, of course, cautious and conservative — but the feeling right now is great. Now we can get on with the experiments and get on with the program of achiev ing successful laser fusion.” The more powerful laser machine, expected to be completed by 1983, will cost an estimated $55 million. Ground was broken last summer for the device, known as Antares.