D DE .in Cciy il Sepia The Battalion COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1961 Number 125 im &T\ 2-2819 Etc c YMCA Staff J. Gordon Gay, coordinator of religious life A&M, is shown with secretaries, Mrs. Gerry and general secretary of the YMCA, Texas L. Stevens, left and Mrs. Nina Foster, right. Quarter Horses Bring Top Money at First Short Course B (9 19 0 9 9 I Dc A sale of seven lots of Quarter Horses auctioned for an average of $1,150 and a top single price of $1,725 at the first annual Horse Management and Training Short Course June 30-July 1 at Texas A&M. The animals, which were owned lay the college, consisted of two mares with foals, one bi’ed mare, three fillies and one yearling stal lion. The $1,725 price was paid by Dr. A. H. Burkhalter of Pasadena, Texas, for a mare and foal, Good- son's Ida Red, -8338. Ike Dahlberg, animal husbandry professor at Texas A&M and pro gram chairman, said a sale will be held again during next year’s short course June 29-30. The college’s Animal Husbandry Department limits its Quarter Horse herd to a certain number, and only excess inimals will be sold. He said the short course was started because of Texas’ rapidly expanding saddle horse industry. The expansion has been especially evident in Quarter Horses. Sponsors are the A&M Depart ment of Animal Husbandry, the School of Veterinary Medicine, N the American Quarter Horse Association. Talks and panel dis cussions, which were heard by ap proximately 500 persons, covered such topics as breeding, feeding, health, breaking and training, con- tormation and a report on the new *-H Horse Program in Texas. : The 4-H Horse Program attrac ted much attention among short fourse members, Dahlberg said. «• W. Snyder, Texas Agricultural Extension Service; Bob Gray, pub lisher of the Texas Horseman mag- | hzine; and Billy Steele, Harris County assistant agricultural agent "ere discussion leaders. The speakers described how the h ^ Roy Gibson, Jr. ^ ins Socony Mobil Oil Scholarship Hoy Bundy Gibson, Jr., geophys- ,Cs student at Texas A&M, has taun awarded a Socony Mobile Oil Company scholarship for the 1961- school year. The scholarship provides $400 for the school and *100 plus tuition and fees for the Et udent. || Purpose of the scholarship is to Courage, assist and recognize stu dents in fields of study directly al- “ e( l to the petroleum industry, ‘rimary considerations is award- n ? the scholarships are academic ^nding, leadership, character and rincerity of purpose. Gibson is a 1957 graduate of ^ a rt High School, and is currently i senior at A&M where he was a distinguished student in 1960. He plans to begin work this sum- toer toward his M.S. degree in geo physics. Houston area’s 4-H horse activi ties have become the largest in the state. Dahlberg said plans are now underway to hold a week-long 4-H horse management school in 1962. No date has yet been set. One of the outstanding- features of the short course was a discus sion of Quarter Horse judging and selection, which included audience participation. This offering will be repeated at the 1962 event. Leading the discussion and dem onstrations were H. Calhoun of Cresson, Texas, American Quarter- Horse Association approved judge, and Doug Wythe of the A&M Ani mal Husbandry Department. Dahlberg emphasized that the short course is kept on a practi cal basis and is directed toward all saddle horse owners. He said he will welcome any comments or requests for particular subjects in future short courses. Much discussion time was spent on lamenesses. Dr. W. C. Banks of the A&M School of Veterinary Medicine outlined the value of radiographs and said such equip ment is used to determine the na ture and extensiveness of deep damage. It reveals damage that would not otherwise be visible. He said the radiograph is help ful in . finding imbedded foreign objects in a horse’s leg. The tech nique also will reveal the presence of tumors, fractures and such me tabolic ailments as rickets. Dr. B. M. Cooley, also of the School of Veterinary Medicine, talked on common diseases of hor ses, treatment, sanitation, symp- tons and immunizatioh. Snyder also gave pointers on re straining horses, moving stubborn horses, and loading in trailers. Another practical session was Conducted by Joe Barnett of Som erville, and John Carter of Bryan, both horse trainers. They discuss ed gentling, training to lead, sad dling and first riding, proper use of hackamores and bits, and the training of cutting horses. Dallas Man Recreates Spirit Of Edison in Home Workshop By The Associated Press The spirit of Thomas Edison and the pioneers of radio live again in a cluttered workshop behind a sea of broken-down washing ma chines at the Clarence Johnson home. Some of the cherished objects are cylinder rolls for the first Edi son phonographs, do-it-yourself radio kits, an inside antennae which looks like a wire coil that exploded, and dozen of ancient speakers. Johnson, 42, a station installer with Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., spends his spare time chas ing down leads on locations of an cient phonographs and radios, and repairing and finishing them un til they operate and look like new. The hobby costs money, and Johnson picks up extra cash by repairing washing machines. The machines between his home and shop are either there to Be fixed or to be torn up for their parts. The old phonographs and radio sets are not for sale. Occasionally Johnson will swap one item for another to improve the quality of his collection. “A good many of my old radio sets were given to me by friends,” he said. “They just cleared out the attic or barn and gave them to me.” He added that “tubes for these sets are not made any more and are hard to find. Fortunately I have managed to get tubes for nearly all my sets and keep them in working order.” One of the oldest pieces is an original Edison phonograph pro duced sometime around 1915. The machine is in good working order, and Johnson has a collection of 38 cylinders for the instrument that grinds out music at 160 revo lutions per minute. That is 10 times as fast as some modern re cording machines. Johnson also has a large collec tion of thick, original Edison phon ograph discs that play at a speed of 80 r.p.m. The oldest record in this group was issued in 1916. The title is “Romance,” a violin solo by Arthur Walsh. The flip side is a flut solo, “Mid the Odor of Roses,” by Harold L. Lyman. The record jacket, in a burst of sales manship, notes that the song was composed by a prince of . Sweden. One of his early radios sits on tripod legs and is wrapped in cop per wire. It is called a Bear Cat No. 4 Crystal Receiver, and was built around 1915 by the Bear Radio Go. of New York. It still works. Four persons can hear at the same time with headphones. A do-it-yourself radio kit dating back 40 years was a challenge to radio engineers of that day. One of the features of the set are peep holes so the operator can deter mine whether the tubes are glow ing. An indoor antennae, called the “Williams Air loop,” is a tall frame around which wire has been rig ged. It was designed for apart ment use when antennaes were a “must” for the sets of the day. All the really old radio sets are battery operated. The phono graphs are hand-wound except for an old RCA model which was one of the first to use household cur rent. Johnson has a collection of more than 6,000 seventy-eight r.p.m. rec ords, some very old and some new. Recently he traded a rebuilt washing machine for a 78 r.p.m. juke box, a real oldster. Self-EvaluationToBe Launched July 25 YMCA Keeps Busy All Time Twelve months each year, 24 hours a day—always open and do ing business—that’s the YMCA at Texas A&M. Housed on the first floor of the three-story YMCA building, in the center of the campus, the “Y,” throughout the years, has been a home away from home for stu dents and visitors alike. The YMCA is directed by J. Gor don Gay, coordinator of religious life and general secretary. He is dean (35 years) in point of con tinuous service of student YMCA work in the United States. The workings and the very at mosphere of the YMCA at A&M is as genuinely in the democratic tra ditions as it is possible to make it. The programs provide for the young men of many lands and many varied beliefs ample oppor tunity for regular religious activi ty. Under the Christian hand of Mr. Gay, student-led Bible study groups meet once Or twice weekly in the dormitories. A block north of the YMCA is the All-Faiths chapel, open at all times for prayer and meditation. Through its weekly programs and various activities, the “Y” stresses Christian leadership by having as many of its responsibili ties student-led as possible. It brings in outside leaders in the Forums on Men-and-Women Rela tions, the Christian marriage and the Christian home and other pro grams. The YMCA promotes good Chris tian fellowship and inspiration through exchange programs with other colleges. It encourages and promotes student participation in regional and sectional conferences. Many students choose full-time Christian work as a result of con tacts made at these conferences. Student chaplains assist the stu dents in many ways. Each year the YMCA conducts a freshman camp near Palestine. Last year 205 freshmen attended the camp. It gives the incoming freshman an opportunity to gain first-hand information about life at A&M, that he may experience a well-rounded introduction to col lege life. Students have prayer before their gatherings and there is a Faculty Christian Fellowship which has monthly meetings of an in spirational nature—all under the direction of the YMCA offices. Active in promoting religious life on the campus, the “Y” is headquarters for the Interfaith Council, composed of students from each church group. They assist in promoting Religious Emphasis Week each year — one of the high points of the yearly campus pro gram. The annual observance of Student World Day of Prayer is another activity, under the gqid- ance of the YMCA. The man directing these and many other programs, has served this Christian work for 35 years. He became interested in religious work while a student at the Uni versity of Alabama. Upon comple tion of his training at Vanderbilt University and the YMCA Gradu ate School, Nashville, Tenn., in 1926, he went to SMU as YMCA secretary and director of religious activities. In 1928 he came to A&M as as sociate secretary of the YMCA and in 1952 became general secretary and in 1957 was named coordinator of religious life and general secre tary. Recently Mr. and Mrs. Gay were guests of former A&M students on a tour of the Holy Land. A typical memorandum of Mr. Gay to military units and civilian councils at A&M, goes like this: “Thanksgiving is over, and before we know it, Christmas will be here. So, now is the time for your organi zation to make plans to help some of the needy and underprivileged children of College Station and Bryan.” The memorandum outlines the manner in which the work is to be performed. —and so it goes, day in and day out, year in and year out—with the YMCA at Texas A&M College. Mestanza To Serve On Experiment Station Staff Dr. Walter F. Mestanza, D.V.M., who has been an assistant profes sor in the Department of Veteri nary Pathology at Texas A&M since September, 1960, will serve also on the staff of the Radiation Biology Laboratory of the Texas Engineering Experiment Station beginning July 1 as veterinary pa thologist. The announcement was made by Dr. Sidney O. Brown, head of the Radiation Biology Labora tory. A native of Peru, Dr. Mestanza received his B.S. and D.V.M. de grees in 1951 from Universidad Na- cional de San Marcos in Lima and his M.S. degree in 1958 from Vir ginia Polytechnic Institute. 4,232 People Visit Campus During June Says Downs A total of 4,232 visitors were on the Campus of Texas A&M during the month of June 1961 P. L. Downs Jr., official greeter of the College announced today. They were attending short courses, conferences, class re unions, and other scheduled meet ings. The College had 720,748 visi tors on the Campus for scheduled meetings and activities during the twelve year and one month period from June 1, 1949 to July 1, 1961. There were thirteen different groups on the Campus during the month of June. S e If-An a lys is Need Will Be Discussed An extensive self-evaluation by the faculty and staff of Texas A&M will be officially launched July 25 with a one- day symposium with three nationally known educators high lighting the event. Known as the Faculty-Staff Conference on Aspirations, the symposium will hear Dr. Eric A. Walker, president of Pennsylvania State University, Dr. Daniel Aldrich, dean of agriculture—statewide, University of California, and Dr. Paul Miller, provost and vice president, Michigan State Uni versity, discuss the need for critical self-analysis in light of the challenges higher education must face within the next 15 years. Purposes of the symposium,♦ according to Dr. Wayne C. Hall, dean of graduate studies and general chairman for the event, are to orient the gen eral faculty and staff as to the goals and objectives of the study, and to stimulate the faculty and staff to consider the great issues which will confront Texas A&M College during the next 15 years' “This is the first general meet ing of the faculty-staff study groups which will scrutinize the various operations of the College,” Dr. Hall said. He added that the symposium is open to every mem ber of the faculty and staff. “These three key speakers are men of exceptional ability, and each has recently gone through a period of self-study on their respective campuses. Becausp of this, I’m confident they will contribute ma terially to the symposium,” Dr. Hall stated. President Walker will summarize the highlights of the Penn State study and project future needs as he sees them in instruction, physi cal sciences and engineering. Dean Aldrich will stress research, agri culture, and the life sciences against the background of the University of California study. Dr. Miller will outline briefly the benefits of the Michigan study and will emphasize future needs in extension, off- campus activities, and services. The morning session of the symposium will be held in the MSG Ballroom with Dr. Hall presiding. Texas A&M President Earl Rud der will open the meeting with a welcoming address and a state ment of purposes. The keynote addresses will follow, each to be ended with a brief question-answer period. The afternoon sessions will be devoted to discussions of specific topics. Those interested in resident instruction and student life will meet in the MSG Ballroom with Dr. G. M. Watkins, director of agricul tural instruction, as general chair- (.See SELF ANALYSIS Page 4) 125 Firms Own Most of Nation’s Gas Pipelines DALLAS—The nation has more than 600,000 miles of natural gas pipelines in operation, the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank reported re cently. A total of 125 firms oper ate the intricate network. The bank credits the network with preserving all but about 5 per cent of the natural gas in the na tion. This contrasts with Venezuela and the Middle East, which lose two-third of the natural gas they produce, mostly in connection with oil production. The bank reports that marketed production of natural gas in the nation doubled between 1950 and 1959, with interstate shipments ac counting for an increasingly larger portion of all gas sold. These interstate sales moved from 40 per cent in 1950 to 60 per cent in 1959. About 80 per cent of the ga$ shipped between states originated in the Dallas bank’s Southwest Re gion, with Texas now providing al most one-half the national total of exports. Over the past 10 yeai’s, the most significant rates of increase in in terstate shipments from the South west have occurred in New Mexico and Louisiana. \ While Texas’ exports accounted for 50 per cent of the Southwest total in 1959, this was a decline from 66 per cent in 1950. On the other hand, Louisiana’s portion of total shipments rose from one-fifth in 1950 to nearly one-third in 1959. Some of this in crease came from the prolific off shore wells. All expansion of interstate fa cilities since Feb. 7, 1942 has been required to have Federal Power Commission authorization. A&M Physicists Are Able To Scan Ultraviolent Region Texas A&M physicists are peek ing into the far ultraviolet region now that they have a new vacuum spectrometer. The optial apparatus, which cost $36,400, was purchased by the Physics Division of the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. It will be used to further the research of Dr. Jesse B. Coon, A&M phys ics professor, who is studying molecular structures. The spectrometer will enable Dr. Coon and his graduate students to obtain much new information on molecular structure by giving them the opportunity to investigate the optical spectra from molecules in the far untraviolet region. The far ultraviolet radiation from the sun does not penetrate the earth’s blanket of atmosphere. These radiations, which have short wavelengths, can travel through the vacuum of outer space- Optical parts of the spectrome ter are operated in a vacuum to simulate the airless conditions of outer space. Dr. Coon said the apparatus de tects far ultraviolet radiations from molecules in a vapor state. The spectrometer records the spec- timm of a molecule and breaks down the light or radiation, into its component wave lengths. A spectrum is a series of radiant energies arranged in order of wave length. For example, a rainbow gives the spectrum of visible light. Interpretation of a spectrum yields information about the be havior of electrons in molecules. It gives the electronic structure of molecules. Such information, the scientist said, contributes to the basic the- ory of chemical valence, a key point in the study of chemistry from the high school level on up. Knowledge of valences is import ant to the understanding of mod ern chemistry. A special project with A&M’s new spectrometer is the study of the spectrum of molecules at liq uid helium temperature, close to absolute zero of temperature. The technique is to deposit the molecules in solid argon. Argon, a gas in its natural state, solidi fies to a transparent solid at ex tremely low temperatures. This is a new method of studying the structure of molecules. Dr. Coon’s work has received sup port from the Air Force since 1952. He and his graduate stu dents have made significant con tributions to the knowledge of molecular structures. Nine mas ter’s theses and seven doctoral dis sertations have come from the in vestigations.