TALION Drive Carefully Number 8: Volume 57 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1957 Price Five Cents Governor Daniel. Speak To Conference in September 150 Anticipated To Attend Water Conference Governor Price Daniel will be the principal speaker at a banquet for delegates to the third annual Water for Texas Conference here, September 16-18. Robert L. Whiting, head of the Petroleum Engineering Department and general chairman for the conference, said today that Governor Daniel will speak to the 150 delegates expected to attend this year’s conference, at an evening session on September 17. The three-day meeting, centered on the theme of “What Is Happening to Our Water” will cover such subjects as water storage changes, subsurface reservoirs, stream flow hydrology, evapo-transpiration, mechanisms for rainmaking, water quality and polution ^ and conversion of brackish water to fresh water and re use of municipal and indus trial water. About 150 of the state’s top hy- drologists) geophysicists, meteor ologists, reservoir engineers and managers of state, city and indus trial water reservoirs are expected for the conference. .New Members Introduced To Kiwanis Four new members were in troduced to the College Sta tion Kiwanis Club at their weekly meeting Tuesday in the Memorial Student Center. Rev. James B. Argue, Norbert McNeill and Tom Prater are the newest members of the local and civic organization. The annual sport shirt contest was held at the Tuesday luncheon meeting of the club and a commit tee chose the man with the loud- fet colored sport shirt. The two finalists were Herb Fincher and Rev. Argue. A report of the Kiwanis board of directors was made and it was announced that the board approv ed a proposal made by Bill Krue ger for the club to support a tree and shrub planting program in the local schools and throughout the community. Such a program would be expected to culminate in extensive Arbor Day plantings. The board also heard a report by Isaac Peters on' Cub Pack 802 and Boy Scout Troop 102. Both groups are sponsored by the local Kiwanis club. In a report from Bob Davidson is was disclosed that the Commun ity Physical Improvement Com mittee has received four picnic tables to be used in 1 Kiwanis Park. Prexy Appoints Batt Study Committee Acting President D. W. Williams has appointed a com mittee to make a “thorough study of the operations and procedures of the Student Publications organization” follow ing the directions of the Board of Directors and to report the find ings to them. Chairman of the committee is E. V. Walton, head of the Depart ment of Agricutural Education. Other members of the committee are John M. Prescott, Bardin Nel son, Kenneth Bailey, John H. Hill, T. J. Parker, C. D. Holland and Henderson Shuffler. Williams said yesterday he hoped the committee could make the study and prepare their find ings before the fall semester be gins. He suggested that the report include editorial organization, methods of appointment or selec tion, policies of publications on ma terial selection, responsibilities and authorities and suggestions for improvement. The Board of Directors meet next on September 16. Night Beat HYATTSVTLLE, Md., (£>)—Two cruising Prince Georges County policemen responded promptly to the radio call: “Check disorderly frogs at 4512 28th Street.” Mrs. Mary Harmon told the po licemen the frogs “holler and car ry on sometimes until midnight or later.” The patrolmen heard nothing, gave their report: “Frogs quiet at this time. Ad vise complainant to see the may or.” TSCW Opens With Change Of Name The school will be the same but the name will be different as a college familiar to most all Aggies opens its doors this fall. What was formerly known as TSCW will begin official use of its new name; Texas Woman’s University on Au gust 19. Action of the Texas Leg islature brought about the name change. With reference to this change, President John A. Guinn explained that “the institution which was known for more than 50 years as CIA and later as TSCW thus en ters a new era in which it will enjoy the advantages of a desig nation appropriate to its true char acter.” TSCW is the only college or uni versity in the entire South which offers the doctorate in all major subject matter areas of home eco nomics. To date, 19 Ph.D.’s have been conferred, mainly in the fields of nutrition and textile tech nology. Its research programs, which in clude research services available to Hutchison Named Acting AES Head John E. Hutchison, state agricul- tux^al leader for the Texas Agri culture Extension Service since September 1954, has been named acting director of the service, ef fective Aug. 20. He succeeds G. G. Gibson, who resigned effective Aug. 19 to ac cept an assignment with the United States Operations Mission in Kara chi, Pakistan. The announcement was made by D. W. Williams, vice chancelloi* for agriculture of the A&M College System. Hutchison is a native of Hill County. He holds from A&M a B.S. degree in dairy husbandry; M.S. in horticulture, and a master of education degree in agricultural education. He taught vocational agriculture from 1936 to 1945. In 1945, he was appointed county agricultural a- gent in Matagorda County and was transferred to the headquarters staff as associate horticulturist in 1949. In 1951 he was promoted to extension horticulturist and in 1954 to his present assignment. ■i m B • A" state hospitals and special schools as well as other state institutions and establishments, are supported by industrial, governmental and private grants which in the past five years have totaled more than a half-million dollars. TSCW’s occupational therapy school has the only such degree program for undergraduates in the Southwest. Its enrollment of freshmen occupational therapy ma jors is expected to be the largest in the nation. The School of Library Science was the first in Texas to be ac credited by the American Library Association and has been so desig nated ever since. TSCW’s College of Nursing, which utilizes the clinical facilities of Parkland Memorial Hospital in nearby Dallas, has grown to where this fall it will have more than 250 students in the four collegiate levels. The Department of Journalism is the only one in a woman’s col lege ever accredited by the Ameri can Council on Education for Jour nalism. This accreditation began in 1948 and was renewed in June of this year. Four new buildings of modern functional design were opened on the campus during the past year and several other important spe cialized buildings will be started in 1958. The component colleges and pro fessional schools of Texas Wo man’s University ai’e as follows: College of Arts and Sciences, Col lege of Education, College of Fine Arts, College of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, College of Household Arts and Sciences, College of Nursing, School of Li brary Science and School of Occu pational Therapy. The other ma jor unit is the Graduate School. JUNCTION MANOR TAKES SHAPE as the construction crew clears the ground and sinks the foundation piers. On this spot Aggie footballers will soon have a “home of their own.” Albritton Engineering Plant Will Locate Here In October Lions Camp Report Given At CS Meeting At the Monday noon meet ing of the College Station Lions Club Charles Haas, president of the local club, gave the members a report of his recent trip to the Texas Lions Camp for Crippled Children in Kerrville. He explained to the members how their assessment of 25 cents a week was used at the camp. Haas also told the men he visited with several of the children at tending the camp. There are seven sessions at the Kerrville camp and each one lasts for two weeks. Eugenia Rush, daughter of Mir. and Mrs. Eugene Rush of College Station, is serving as a counselor at the camp this summer. She is a student at the University of Tex as. Besides discussing the crippled children’s camp, the group also held a business meeting at which a balance sheet for the club was distributed to each member. Figures show the club has a to tal of $1,491.45 in assets. Re ceivable assets include $257.08 the club earned as its share of the Lions Light bulb sale held recent ly- No liabilities are listed by the club and the net worth equals the amount of the assets. Ford D. Albritton, Jr., presi dent of the Albritton Engineering Corp., expressed his appreciation yesterday of the excellent coopei'- ation he received fi’om the Bryan Industrial Foundation, Inc. while investigating Bryan for the site of his company’s operations. Greene H. Buchanan, president of the Chamber of Commerce, said “we are happy to have the Albrit ton Engineering Corp. become a part of the Bryan’s industrial group and we extend them every best wish for success in our com munity.” Buchanan praised R. B. But ler, chairman of the Foundation’s Board of Directors -which serves as the Industrial Committee for the Bryan Chamber and the mem bers of the Industrial Committee for the excellent work performed in presenting factual information and negotiating with Albritton during the past year’s time. Albritton Engineering C o m- pany, manufacturer of Alenco al uminum windows, will move to the new plant containing approximate ly 86,500 square feet of production space about October 1. The new plant, located at Fin- feather Road and Palasota Drive will be a model of modern pro duction efficiency, with straight line output. Raw materials will enter at one end of the plant and the finished product will be crated and shipped from the other. Albritton, an A&M graduate of 1943, said about 100 local resi dents will be employed at the be ginning of operations here. “We hope to increase this number to approximately 200 within the first 12 months of operations in Bryan, as the result of steadily increas ing production from our new plant and the anticipated introduction of new products.” STILL IN USE is this room in the old Science Hall which, according - to the President’s .progress report, in “the interest of economy it will be necessary for the Department of Physiology and Pathology to remain there for another year.” Weather Today SHOWERS Partly cloudy skies with scat tered thundershowers after 2 p.m. are predicted for today. Ninety- nine was the high yesterday, with this morning’s low, 78 degrees. At 10:30 a.m. the thermometer reading was 90 degrees. Ford B. Albritton Jr. Some 14 present employees of Albritton Engineering, including he president and other key person nel, will move their families to Bryan. It pointed out that Bryan was selected for the Company’s place of future operations ofter a 12- month study of a “great many” potential locations in the Texas Gulf industrial area. “Bryan was finally chosen be cause of its residents—the excel lent community and business at mosphere and the opportunity of obtaining good, reliable personnel to. become members of our Albrit ton office and production team. “In addition, we have a fine plant which provides us with thg opportunity to more than double our present output. This will make it possible for us to meet and accelerate demand for Alenco aluminum windows.” Excellent shipping facilities were also cited an another factor in the company’s decision. In order to achieve the max imum in streamlined, efficient out put and to cut hand operations to a minimum, substantial quantities of new machinery wil be installed, including presses, sawing equip ment and materials handling equip ment. The corporation is the only Southwest member of the Alumin um Window Manufacturers Assoc iation and Albritton is a member of the organization’s board of dir ectors. Although the firm had its be ginnings in 1948 when it was formed by Albritton to sell jal ousie windows, it was organized as Albritton Engineering Corpor ation in 1953 to produce and mar ket its first pi’oduct, the Alenco jalousie. As a result of the de c-line, in demand for jalousie win dows, the firm designed and mar keted a single hung window in the fall of 1954. Acceptance was immediate, as reflected by stead ily increasing sales and production since that time. In the interven ing period, the company also de veloped and introduced the balance of the window models and styles in its present line. Development Conference Here Industrial development in all its phases will highlight the talks and discussions at the 7th annual Tex as Industrial Development Confer ence to be held here Aug. 15-16. Gordon H. Turrentine, general manager of the Houston Chamber of Commerce, is chairman of the board of advisors of the confer ence. Subjects to be discussed include, Why an Industrial Team, Selling the Community on Industrial De velopment, Where to get Help in Industrial Development, Home Grown vs. Imported Industry, Get ting the Volunteers to Work, The Haynesville Story — Locating a Branch Plant, New Legislation Af fecting Industrial Development, Opportunities in Fabrication of Plastics, Manufacturing for Gen eral Motors, Industrial Distidcts for the Smaller Community, Com munity Planning, Urban Renewal and Industrial Development. BURLESQUE WENT OUT YEARS AGO and Herb Finch er is merely pulling his shirt tail out for the judges of the annual Kiwanis Sport Shirt Contest. He and Rev. James B. Argue (right) were battling it out for top honors and Fincher is showing the club that he too can wear his shirt outside his trousers.