
music
The crew at Texas A&M’s Rudder Theatre Complex may be the busiest people on campus.
Stimson, a senior business honors major, will share his sunshiny tunes at 6 p.m. Friday at the Theta House for the public event Theta Fiesta.
Black has been with OPAS for 26 of the organization’s 38 seasons, and she says Texas A&M’s place in the performing arts arena has changed over time.
Five outstanding undergraduates at Texas A&M have been nominated for the Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships.
The Texas A&M Singing Cadets journeyed to Kennebunkport, Maine at the request of Former First Lady Barbara Bush as a surprise for President George H. W. Bush on his 85th birthday.
The goal: lead the 347 members of the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band through a halftime show that will leave the audience in awe.
Cadets Cody Works, William O’Gorman and Benjamin Rush will lead the Fightin’ Texas Aggie Band during the 2009-2010 school year.
In their honor, the Rands established the Patricia H. and Glendale B. Rand ’57 Singing Cadet Endowment.
Joseph Nagyvary, a professor emeritus of biochemistry, first theorized in 1976 that chemicals used on the instruments – not merely the wood and the construction – are responsible for the distinctive sound of these violins.
Somehow, Savannah Frank manages to pack into her day a full course load, a rigorous corps schedule and almost daily rehearsals for the Women’s Chorus.