Che Battalion VOLUME 64 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1968 Number 23 United Chest Drive Nets $6,000 In First Week of Campaign ‘Experimenter’ Picnic To West COEDS MAKE BONFIRE PLANS 3 lans for serving coffee around the clock in the stacking area during bonfire were discus- ed by an informal coed committee which included from left, Ed Cooper, director of civil- an student activities, Mrs. Lorene Roby, coed adviser, Candy Parker and Anne Carter. Photo by W. R. Wright) Vietnam Youth, 12, Finds §3-Member Family 9 Here A Vietnamese youth, 12-year- d Do Thanh Quang of Saigon, )st eight members of his family ist spring but gained 33 more September. Election Thursday fill Determine I Senate Posts | Seniors in the College of Busi- less Administration and sopho- liores in the College of Pre- 'eterinary Medicine will vote 'hursday in a run-off election to ecide two representatives to the itudent Senate. Competing for Senior BA repre- entative are Robert Edgecomb fld Arthur J. Erickson. Mitchell .Timmons and Tommy Hender- on will be running for Sopho- lore Pre-Vet representative. Elected last week were Sam fom, junior BA representative, jtod Kent Caperton, sophomore BA representative. The run-offs will be held in he typewriter room of Francis fall from 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. The eason for the change from the iemorial Student Center, the isual election spot, to Francis, is o locate the voting site “as close o the potential electors as pos- ible,” according to Election Com mission president Gerald Geist- reidt. Geistweidt also said the turn out last Thursday, although light, fas “better than in previous ears in an election of this type.” Unirersity National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M. —Adr. He was adopted last year by Squadron 5. The AFROTC unit “adoption” was through the Christian Children’s Fund, an in ternational organization which promotes help for needy children. Do likes the idea of his squad ron “family.” “I thought I had only one spon sor and did not realize that in stead, there are 60 sponsors to look after me,” he wrote the Squadron 5 cadets. “From now on, my life should be much hap pier and brighter.” Through the unit sponsorship, the youngster in Saigon is pro vided food, clothing, school books and other necessities. The A&M unit commanded by Cadet Maj. Stephen B. Maddox of Pampa also sends along gifts at Christ mas, a current project of the squadron’s 33 freshmen. Squadron 5 graduated eight seniors last spring. “The sponsorship is sort of a freshman project each year,” ex plained William K. Ohlmeyer of Yazoo City, Miss. “Our freshmen liked the idea of sponsoring Do when we told them about it. They’re getting together a letter introducing themselves, a unit picture and “T” shirt to send him.” Communication is slow, noted Ohlmeyer, a junior aerospace en gineering major. “We mailed a letter last No vember and didn’t get a reply until February,” he said. Squadron 5 went through fur ther uncertainty of its ward’s welfare last spring during the Vietcong Saigon offensive. “I wrote the CCF headquarters in Richmond, Va., twice a week trying to find out something,” Ohlmeyer added. “We later found out the or phanage was bombed and all the kids were scattered for a while. Some of the advisors who worked there were captured. Several weeks later we received a letter that they were all back together.” Do and a brother live with his 70-year-old grandfather, a retired pastor, and after school carries water, cooks meals, washes clothes and sweeps the house. “These kids don’t understand the war and haven’t any choice in it,” Ohlmeyer pointed out. “We feel it’s sort of up to us to help out the best way we can.” “One of these days, most of us in Squadron 5 will be in Vietnam and Saigon. We’ll have someone to see,” he went on. Do will likely be the only kid running around in an Aggie “T” shirt. *: The German tourist center of Bad Salzuflen took another step toward Westernization last sum mer with introduction of the American picnic. Other cultural exchanges and increased understanding between the United States and Germany came about as the result of the Experiment in International Liv ing, which sent A&M student Frank Tilley to Europe for two months. “Germany and Berlin are very Western,” observed the senior in dustrial engineering major. “I tried to speak German to them and they conversed in English.” ONE OF five A&M Experi menters who traveled in Russia, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and West Germany, Tilley became a member of the family of Mr. and Mrs. Georg Schirmack of Bad Salzuflen, a resort city on the autobahn between Cologne and Hannover. The EIL program is one of international goodwill based on the premise that one best under stands another people and their culture by living among them as members of a family. “If I had been able to pick another family, I couldn’t have selected one I’d have liked more,” remarked Tilley, a resident of Jacksonville. The Schirmack’s two children, Manfred 17 and Karin 10, struck quick friendships with the sum mer EIL visitor. THEY MADE many excursions through the Bad Salzuflen-Her- ford area with other Experiment ers in the region. “We walked almost everywhere we went,” noted Tilley. “We aver aged four to five miles a day and often took a picnic lunch. It took awhile to sell them on the idea of a picnic, though.” Brings Germany Coordinating Board Authorizes Geography Department Here Texas A&M has been author ized by the Texas College and Universtiy System Coordinating Board to form a separate geog raphy department offering a full slate of degrees, announced Dr. Earl F. Cook, acting geosciences dean. The university currently oper ates a geology and geography department offering several geog raphy courses but no degrees in the field. Dr. Cook noted the Coordinat ing Board’s action was unusual in that it will allow the new de partment to offer initially all three academic degrees — bache lor’s, master’s and Ph.D. “This action clearly demon strates the Coordinating Board's confidence in us,” Dr. Cook em phasized. He pointed out the Geology and Geography Department currently has five geography professors on its staff, including a distinguished professor of geography, Dr. George F. Carter. Cook said Dr. Edwin B. Doran Jr., assistant geosciences dean and professor of geography, was instrumental in efforts to estab lish the new department. Operation of a separate geog raphy department still requires presentation of a financial plan, Dr. Cook said, but he anticipates formal approval before mid-term. Mrs. Schirmack, whose husband is a brick mason and owns a 25- room boarding house popular with German tourists from Berlin, tried the picnic idea in the living room of their home first. “We once ate on the steps of Sbisa To Get New System For Messages To provide “better communi cations to the civilian students,” David Wilks, president of the Civilian Student Council, has ap pointed Garry Mauro as student coordinator of a committee to operate the public address system of Sbisa Hall. The new program for student announcements is a result of dis cussions with Col. Fred Dollar, director of Food Services. Due to a shortage of dining hall staff, effective use of the system put a strain on workers in Sbisa be cause of the lengthy meal hours. All proposed announcements must be delivered in writing to Howard Perry, room 8 in the /YMCA, for approval. If possible, announcements should be sub mitted one day prior to broad casting. Mauro, junior yell leader and a civilian, will operate with a student committee of four re sponsible for making announce ments on the system. Individual members will pick up approved announcements from Perry on a daily basis and before noon, schedules permitting. The committee chairmen will be responsible for rotating the key to the office where the PA system is located. He will also be in charge of instructing com mittee members in the use of the system. Announcements will be brief and consist of only what would be of widespread interest to the students, such as Silver Taps, bonfire coordination, yell prac tice, student election information, and university social and recre ational events, Mauro said. An nouncements will be approved for broadcasting for one day only under most circumstances. During non-office hours, the committee chairman may approve urgent announcements, such as a change in time or location of yell practice or the cancellation of major events. Bryan Building & Loan Association, Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. —Adv. a city’s town hall,” remarked Tilley. The former A&M camera committee chairman said Bad Salzuflen’s Kurpark (tourist park) included a large wooded tract with hiking trails, an amusement area and other park features common in the U. S., except picnic tables. Jaunts also included a five-day visit in Berlin, an overnight bus- boat trip to the Island of Helgo land in the North Sea and a 17- day bus trip into Southern Ger many’s Alps. “THE TRIP to Helgoland was by bus to Bremen where we spent the night in a lavish hotel and then on to Bremerhaven. A 1,900- passenger boat took us to the island. We returned by the same route and it cost us 58 marks (about $15) apiece,” Tilley said. The Germans are very gener ous, he noted. The Schirmacks sent along gifts for Frank, his parents, brother, sister-in-law and niece. “They wouldn’t let me pay for the weekend to the North Sea,” he added. Tilley, who studied German at EIL headquarters in Vermont be fore the summer tour started, said a three-day photo course at the Leitz factory in Wetzlar “did more for my German than any thing else.” “THE INSTRUCTOR, who had the remarkable name of Herr Kraut, said everything twice, in English and German,” he said. “Germans I talked with knew quite a bit about the United States,” he added. “Manfred keeps up with American and English popular music by listening avidly to British Armed Forces radio.” “I studied politics and govern ment extensively before going over,” Tilley smiled. “I should have been reading ‘Billboard’.” College Station’s United Chest fund-raising drive netted nearly $6,000 during the first week and is rapidly gaining momentum, noted Edwin H. Fenner, campaign chairman. Fenner, assistant director of Texas A&M’s Engineering Ex periment Station, said first-week contributions totaled $5,857.06, or 21 per cent of the $27,500 goal. HE POINTED OUT, however, that “turn-ins” are increasing regularly each day and now run ning about twice as high as dur ing the first days of the cam paign. “We don’t envision any prob lem in reaching the goal,” Fenner remarked. “It simply takes time to get things going.” A&M President Earl Rudder and College Station Mayor D. A. (Andy) Anderson have both en dorsed the drive and urged maxi mum participation by all resi dents. The United Chest’s record bud get this year will support 16 charitable and civic agencies, three more than in 1967. SHARING AGENCIES and amounts they will receive: College Station Community House, Inc., $2,500; College Sta tion Recreation Council, $2,500; Boy’s Club of America (Bryan), $3,000; Brazos Valley Rehabilita tion Center, $3,000; Brazos Coun ty Counseling Service, $2,500; Salvation Army, $1,350. Girl Scouts Area Council, $2,- 800; Boy Scouts of America, $3,000; American Red Cross, $3,500; Texas United Fund, $100; United Service Organization, (USO), $300; Traveler’s Aid of America, $50; United Cerebal Palsy of Texas, Inc., $200; Girl’s Club of Brazos County, $1,500; and Texas Association of Mental Health, $450. JOINING with Fenner in spear heading the drive are Joe Sawyer, Jack Bradshaw, W. Taylor Riedel and Dr. Luther Jones. Pool Closing Date Will Be Delayed Wofford Cain Swimming Pool is remaining open past the an nounced closing date, according to Dr. Carl W. Landiss, head of the Health and Physical Edu cation Department. Dr. Landiss said the pool will be open from 4-6 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 2-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday until further notice. B B &L WEATHER Thursday—Partly Cloudy, winds Southerly 5 to 10 mph. High 76, low 66. Friday — Partly cloudy, winds Northerly 10 to 15 mph. High 74, low 58. Kickoff at Waco — 74°, South westerly winds 10 mph. Humidity 40%. APO Campus Chest Collects $1100, With $7500 Goal The Campus Chest campaign of the Student Senate Welfare Com mittee has collected $1,100, Bill Faulkner, president of XI Delta Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, reported Tuesday. The money has come from dor mitory drives and contributions placed in barrels at each gate of Kyle Field at home football games. Leading in donations, according to Faulkner, were Company F-l, leading in total donations, and Company D-l, leading in per capita donations. “A campus chest sweetheart will be selected from nominees of the units and dorms,” Faulkner said, adding that the nominee of the unit or dorm with the highest per capita will be selected as the Campus Chest Sweetheart. “We were pleased with how successful the first two games were, but we hope for a larger donation at the Arkansas game,” Faulkner said. The Inquiring Battman University - College Ave. Intersection: What Should Be Done? DAVID BAKER Junior “1 think traffic lights should be put up, but during the rush hours a patrolman would still be neces- wry to control the flow of traf- BILL HAMILTON Freshman “I think it is a traffic hazard be cause too many people are in a hurry when they pass through the intersection. The addition of a stop light would be a big help.” ROBERT MACK Graduate Student “Although I’ve been here a year, I haven’t heard of any collisions at the intersection. Therefore, I don’t think it is a traffic hazard, as long as there is a traffic pa trolman to direct traffic during rush hours.” JAN ONDROVIK Junior “I really don’t think it’s a hazard as long as people drive carefully.” DWAYNE LINDSEY Senior “I think it does create a traffic hazard. Installation of a stop light would probably solve this problem.” jim McDonald Senior “I think the flow of traffic is bet ter with the four way stop. Dur ing rush hours a traffic patrol man controls the intersection and during non-rush hours most people drive courteously.” CUTRIS FUCHS Junior “I think it’s a traffic hazard and the addition of a stop light would help solve the problem.” (All photos by W. R. Wright)