LIBRARY n 12 COPIES J . V The Battalion Volume 69 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, AUGUST 18, 1960 Number 131 Dreyer Quits MSC Position For TFAA Job Wallace Dreyer has resigned his | position as art director and ad- | viser to the Creative Arts Com- I mittee in the Memorial Student Center to accept a new position, MSC Director J. Wayne Stark announced Wednesday. Dreyer will become executive director of the Texas Fine Arts Assn, in Austin, Stark said. Pur pose of the association is to de velop art and artists in Texas. Named in October 1959 to re place Mrs. Emalita Terry in the MSC, Dreyer is a recognized Tex as artist. Last November Ford Times used several of his paint ings in an issue of their publica tion. “We will certainly miss Mr. Dreyer in our student program. He is rapidly becoming a widely recognized artist in Texas and I feel that in not too many years we will be able to point with pride at having had his services for a year,” Stark said. Dreyer has studied art with San Mieguel de Allende in Aspen, Colo., Fletcher Martin at the San Antonio Art Institution; Alice Naylor in San Antonio; and Mrs. Terry. An architecture student at the University of Texas in 1942 and again in 194G-47, Dreyer served In the 3rd Army in Europe during iVorld War IT. The former MSC art director has \von prizes and awards for his work at the annual Festival of Texas Fine Arts at Austin, River Art Competition in San Antonio and the Waco Art Forum An nual. No replacement has been named for Dreyer, Stark said. Ag. Eeo., Sociology Gets New Professor Charles W. Brown has joined the Department of Agi’icultural Economics and Sociology as an assistant professor. The new faculty member will tonduct research in the field of grain marketing. Brown, who was reared in Heb- bronville, received his B.S. degree in agricultural economics in 1957 and his M.S. degree in the same subject in 1958 at A&M. During the past two years, he has com pleted course work and other ma jor requirements for a doctorate degree from Oklahoma State Uni versity. He is a member of Alpha Zeta, Phi Kappa Phi and the American Farm Economics Assn. Brown and his wife live at 2602 Morris Lane in Bryan. HP Hi Remodeling in MSC Remodeling of the Memorial Student Center Dining Room and conversion'of the Coffee Shop into a cafeteria began last week. A workman is shown here installing new ceiling tiles in the Dining Room. The cafeteria is ex pected to be completed by the opening of the fall semes ter, according to J. Wayne Stark, MSC director. MSC Remodeling For Cafeteria The Coffee Shop of the Memorial Student Center is being replaced by a cafeteria and the MSC Dining Room is being completely refurnished, according to' MSC Director J. Wayne Stark. Work on the remodeling and^ — convei’sion began last week and is expected to be completed by the opening of the fall semester. “We have thought for a long time that the cafeteria was need ed and wanted by persons on the campus and feel that it will in crease our service,” Stark said in explaining the conversion of the Coffee Shop into a cafeteria. Ralph Mulhouser, kitchen engi neer from Houston, is adviser and consultant on the cafeteria con struction. Work on the project is being done by MSC mainte nance personnel at a cost of be tween $8,000 and $9,000, Stark said. Entrance to the new cafeteria will be located- near the MSC Gj/t Shop. When completed, the cafe teria will seat approximately 75 people. The Dining Room will continue to be operated aS in the past, Stark said, and overflow from the cafeteria will be seated in the Dining Room when space is avail able. Student groups will'also be able to use the food facilities of the cafeteria and the seating area at the back of the Dining Room for evening and some noon meetings, Stark said. oying some of the 1 ;k during the book drive for idated Elementary School the College Station Kiwanis , S. Creswell, principal of the hool, said anyone who still s for the elementary age stu- Books dents and would like to donate them should bring them by the Superintendent’s Office in the A&M* Consolidated Junior High School Building. “We are shooting at a goal of five to ten books for each elemen tary age child. This would give us an ade quate library for them,” Mrs. Creswell said. Square, Round Dancers Meeting in MSC for School Manning Smith Directs Institute By COLLYAR McILHERAN Battalion Staff Writer Almost 100 persons from all parts of the United States and Canada are here this week for the 10th annual Square and Round Dancers Institute being held through Saturday in the Memorial Student Center. Under the direction of College Station Dance Instructor Manning Smith, the institute has registrants from 15 states and one from Richmond Hill, Canada. The attendants, most of who are actively engaged in teaching dancing as a hobby, are gathered to learn new tech niques and steps in teaching the various dances. Included in the dances being instructed are square, round, ballroom, contra and folk, as well as folk singing. “We have people here from’* alii walks of life to vacation, dance and learn,” Smith said. Opened Monday The institute opened Mon day and will conclude with a final Grand Ball Saturday night in the MSC Ballroom. The Saturday night ball will also be open to square dancers from the surround ing area, Smith said. Members of the teaching staff at the insti tute will give special perform ances at the Saturday night af fair. Instructors Instructors include Smith and his wife, Don and Marie Arm strong of Tampa, Fla., Ben High- burger of Dallas and Frankie and Leland Lawson of Houston. “The institute is a short course on recreational dancing. Our pur pose is to elevate American folk dancing to a higher level than that which it now occupies,” Mrs. Smith said in explaining the in stitute. Dance Each Night Climaxing each day’s activities is a dance from 8 to 10:30 p.m. and a coffee social following the dance. The group is also provid ing at least one portion of the KBTX-TV program “Town Talk” each morning this week. Instruc tion begins each morning at 9 and lasts until 5 p.m. States represented include Ala bama, Arizona, California, Flori da, Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Kan sas, Louisiana, Michigan, Missis sippi, Missouri, Ohio, Wisconsin and Texas. Prof Predicts Texas Cheese To Equal Swiss By FRED PASS Farm Editor Dallas Morning News Written for The AP Texas cheese one day will match that of Wisconsin and Switzerland. That’s the prediction of a Rus sian-born scientist at A&M, and he’s doing his part to make the prediction come true. For 10 years, I. I. Peters, an associate professor in the Depart ment of Dairy Science, has been making cheese from Texas-pro duced milk. An economic problem has been keeping Texas out of a prominent place in the cheese-making busi ness. In Wisconsin, there’s an abundance of fresh milk through out the year. Cheese factories stay busy all the time. In Texas, dairy farmers produce a surplus of milk when pastures are lush. But other times there’s a shortage of fresh milk. This means that Texas’ six cheese fac tories cannot operate at full capa city the year round. Texas eats 80 million pounds of cheese a year but makes only 5 million pounds. Chicago School Evaluated By TEES Group The Texas Engineering Experi ment Station has recently eval uated Chicago’s Richard E. Byrd Elementary School in terms of its quality of natural lighting, natur al ventilation, and sound control at the request of the Board of Education. The Chicago Board of Education is conducting a study under a grant from the Educational Facil ities Laboratories to determine the value received per school building dollar since World War II. The school is of an ultra-modern design by prominent architects. Equipment was flown to Chicago and a survey was conducted by Texas Engineering Experiment Station researchers Ben H. Evans and William G. Wagner. Studies were made also at the Station’s architectural research laboratory with a model of the school. The research at the school and with the model indicated that the contemporary school is much im proved over the “red schoolhouse.” The Memorial Student filled this week with the strains of square dancing music and the voice of the square dancing callers as the 10th annual Square and Round Dancers Institute opened Mon- Practicing Square Dancing Center has been day to run through Saturday. Held here each year under the direction of College Station Dance Instructor Manning, Smith, the institute attracts dancers from through out the United States and Canada. Calhoun Finishes Tour Of Far North Facilities Dr. John C. Calhoun, vice chan cellor for development for the A&M College System, has just completed an 11,000-mile, nine-day orientation flight of the Air Force’s construction activity and defense line in the Far North. Calhoun was accompanied by Maj. Gen. A. M..Minton, the U. S. Air Force’s director of civil engi neering. Also in the group were five other leading engineering edu cators and the renowned arctic Former Prof Plans To Lecture Here Dr. Samuel P. Johnson, formerly a faculty member of the Department of Plant Physiology and now with the Space Medicine Section, Aero-Space Division, Boeing Airplane Co., Seattle, Wash.,, will give a lecture next Thursday night at 8 +in the Memorial Student Center Assembly Room. Auto Permits Go on Sale Monday A.M. Fall student automobile reg istration permits will go on sale Monday morning in the Office of Campus Security in the YMCA Basement, Campus Security Chief Fred Hickman announced Wednesday. This sale will be only for those students who know their dormitory or day student ad dress for the fall semester, Hickman said. Cost of the per mits is $3 per semester. Faculty and staff parking permits will also go on sale at the same time for $7.50 per school year. Hickman noted that later this month or early in September Campus Security representa tives will register vehicles at offices of the various zone ad ministrators on the campus. “If car owners will register their vehicles as early as pos sible, this will help both us and them in avoiding the registra tion rush,” Hickman explained. “The Support of Man in Space Flight” will be the title of John son’s talk. The lecture will be sponsored by Sigma Xi and will be of special interest to members of Sigma Xi, faculty members and graduate students, Joe Sorrels, professor in the Department of Civil Engineer ing and a Sigma Xi member, said today. A special invitation for the pub lic to attend the lecture was also issued by Sorrels. Presently senior plant physiol ogist in the space medicine sec tion, Johnson joined Boeing after leaving here in 1959. Receiving his public school edu cation in California, Johnson at- before receiving his B.S. degree from East Texas State College in 1950. He joined the faculty of the Department of Plant Physiology in 1953 and resigned in 1959. He received his M.S. and Ph.D here in 1954. Johnson is a member of the Bot anical Society of Amercia, the American Society for Horticultural Science, the Agronomy Society, the American Society of Plant Physiologists and Sigma Xi. explorer, Col. Bernt Balchen (USAF Ret.). Leaving from Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, D. C., July 30, the group’s top-of-the-world flight took thenl to Frobisher Air Base on Baffin Island; Sond'restrom and Thule Air Bases, Greenland; Cape Perry on the Arctic Ocean; and several Air Force bases in Alaska. From Sondrestorm AB, a visit was made to one of the Air Force’s Distant Early Warning (DEW Line) eastward extension sites on the Greenland Icecap. At Thule AB, the group saw the Air Force’s mammoth Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS) in stallation with its football-field- size antennae. Remote stations on the Arctic Distant Early Warn ing radar net were visited on the flight to Alaska. Arctic Sites This group of distinguished en gineers were invited on the tour of arctic construction sites as guests of the Air Force for orien tation in engineering problems and construction techniques on perma frost and glacial ice deposits. The current progress in opening the arctic for commercial oil and min eral production and defense estab lishments will generate require ments for scientific and engineer ing research by educational insti tutions and influence current ac tions to modify undergraduate and graduate engineering curricula. Others On Trip Also on the trip with Calhoun (See CALHOUN on Page 2) Room Reservations Open Monday at 8 Room reservation policies for the fall semester and the date for the closing of all dormitories for the summer ses sion were announced Wednesday by Harry L. Boyer, housing manager. After paying either the entire"* semester fee, the first installment or the $6 room reservation fee for the fall semester, all students ex cept veterans should report to the Housing Office in the YMCA basement to reserve their rooms beginning Monday at 8, Boyer said Veterans must first report to the Veteran’s Adviser’s Office in the YMCA. Both Corpp and civilian students tended the University of California w i]j able to reserve any rooms not previously reserved or as signed, explained Boyer. As civ ilian students were able to re serve their rooms last spring, Boyer said it is necessary for any civilian students who are now in school to confirm any reservations made last spring. Hart Hall ramps A through D (C and D for graduate students); ramps 1 through 6 of Law; Pur- year; Mitchell; Legett; Milner; and Walton will be used to house civilian students. Dorms 1-12 and 14-17 will again be used for Corps students. Law Hall ramps 7-9, Henderson Hall and Hart Hall ramps E-J will be used for athletes. All dormitories with the excep tion of Hart Hall ramp C and Milner Hall will be locked at G p.m. Friday, Aug. 26, Boyer said. Students who wish to live on the campus between terms may register to live in one of these two halls by paying $10 rent at the Housing Office by 5 p.m. Fri day, Aug. 26. All college dormitories will be open between 1 and 6 p.m. Thurs day and Friday, Aug. 25-26, in order that students may move their propertry into rooms they will occupy for the fall semester, Boyer said. Students not returning in the fall and Corps students attending summer school must turn in their mattress covers at the end of the summer term, Boyer pointed out.