The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 21, 1960, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Application of Schooling
These two firemen are some of the 1,600 firemen attending
the 31st annual Firemen’s Training School, which opened
Monday and closes Friday. They are putting into practice
some of the fire-fighting techniques they have learned in
their class work by putting out an oil fire with liquid chem
icals.
Dousing Oil Fire
Using a carbon dioxide compound, these firemen are show
ing another method of extinguishing oil fires. All during
this week some of the firemen attending the 31st annual
Firemen’s Training School have been practicing putting
out all types of fires.
Gasoline Fire Extinguished
Demonstrating that fast action can put out gasoline fires,
these student firemen move in quickly to extinguish a bar
rel of gasoline. More than 1,600 firemen from all parts of
Texas, other states and four foreign countries are attending
the 31st annual Firemen’s Training School, conducted by
the Texas Engineering Extension Service. This was the
first year the firemen have used Brayton Firemen Train
ing Field, a memorial to the late Col. H. R. Brayton who
served for many years as director of the school.
The Battalion
Volume 59
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JULY 21, I960
Number 127
Registration Set Sunday at 2
For Journalism Workshop
NSF Program
For HS Biology
S tudents Opens
A research participation summer science program for
outstanding high school students,'is under way here through
Aug. 26.
The program is made possible by a grant from the Na
tional Science Foundation.
J. J. Sperry of the Department
of Biology, is program director.
Mrs. Inez Turbeville of Mineola is
girls’ counselor and David W.
Smith of Del Rio is boys’ coun
selor.
Practical knowledge in the vari
ous fields of science will be given
the students. The public is invited
to attend the sessions. The lectures
will be held each day at 11 a. m. in
the auditorium of the Biological
Sciences building. Sessions will be
held Monday through Friday of
each week.
Students in attendance include
the following:
John M. Atkin, Georgetown;
Mary C. Bishop, Del Rio; Robert
E. Carlson, Hoppeston, Illinois;
Catherine I. Clark, Seminole; Mary
Engineer Plans
NSF Lecture
Monday Night
Puerifoy, consulting engineer,
will give a National Science Foun
dation lecture Monday at 7:30 p.
m. in Room 113, Biological Sci
ences building. The public is in
vited.
He will talk on “Highway Con
struction Problems in Alaska.”
Puerifoy graduated with a B.S.
and M.S. degrees in civil engineer
ing at the University of Texas.
He served as professor of Civil
Engineering at the University of
Texas, Texas A&M College; and
in 1946, he was appointed to the
staff of A&M.
Peurifoy served as a specialist
in Engineering Education at the
U. S. Office of Education and as
a hightvay engineer for the Bu
reau of Public Roads in Alaska.
He has had part-time industrial
experience as a member of Peuri
foy and Patterson, consulting en
gineers, and as a consultant to H.
B. Zachry Construction Co.
His lecture will be accompanied
by color slides; and at the conclu
sion of the lecture, he will show
some color motion pictures.
D. Cliburn, Newton; Jeanne Cook.
Longview: Michael A. Earle and
Rich B. Mever Jr., Pasadena: Judy
Foster and Gay Vincent, Bryan;
Chas. B. McClelland and George L.
Eastman ITT, Orange; Wilson V.
Garrett, New Boston; Anna M,
Harkins, Fort Worth; Gary Hay
nes. Marfa; Judv J. Johnston and
Michael A. McCormick, Houston;
Penny Kitchen, Coruus Christi;
David E. Moreman, Hedley; James
M. Muse, Paris; Paul R. Oliver,
Grapeland; Clvde O. Parnell, Cle
burne; Kenneth A. Radde, Meri
dian; David F. Recihert, Austin;
John M. Talent, Lubbock; Charlotte
A. Yates, San Antonio.
Lecturers include Dr. Martin J.
Rubin, meteorologist, National
Science Foundation; Dr . C. C.
Doak, Department of Biology; Dr.
R. D. Lewis, director of the Texas
Agricultural Experiment Station;
Dr. Frank Hubert, dean of the
School of Arts and Sciences; Dr.
J. G. Mackin, head of the Depart
ment of Biology; Dr. E. Burns, De
partment of Horticulture; NSF lec
ture, R. L. Peurifoy, Department,
of Civil Engineering; Dr. Raymond
Reiser, Department of Biochemis
try and Nutrition; Dr. George M.
Krise, Department of Biology; Dr.
Bennie J. Camp, Department of
Biochemistry and Nutrition; NSF
lecture, Dr. E. Keohler, biologist;
Dr. Horace R. Burke, Department
of Entomology; Dr. Joe S. Ham,
Department of Physics; Dr. F. H.
Kasten, Department of Biology;
Dr. Basil W. Wilson, Department
of Oceanography and Meteorology;
Dr. Morris E. Bloodworth, Depart
ment of Agronomy.
Veterans Can Sign
For July Payroll
Starting Monday
Students who are attending
school under the G. I. Bill may
sign for July at the Veterans
Adviser’s office in the YMCA
basement from July 2;> to Aug
ust 4, according to Bennie A.
Zinn, Veterans adviser.
Best “Beatniks”
Miss Mary Anne Franklin of College Station and James
Tucker, senior business administration major, were selected
best “beatniks” at Monday night’s Memorial Student Cen
ter Summer Entertainment Series dance, which featured a
“Beatnik” theme. The pair were awarded two tickets to
next Monday night’s dance which will have a “Roaring
Twenties” theme. %
Dramatic Readings Tuesday Night
Special Program
Planned In MSC
“Roaring Twenties” decorations will set the atmosphere
for Monday night’s dance and Janet Routt and Vic Wiening,
dramatic artists, will present a unique program Tuesday—
continuing the full swing of weekly activities of the Memor
ial Students Center Summer En-^
tertainment Program.
Sunday’s “Afternoon of Free
Films” will return this week after
last week’s “vacation” for the be
tween semester break.
Mrs. Routt and Wiening, who
have appeared in a number-of col
lege and community dramatic pre
sentations, will give a cutting of a
one-act comedy, “Pygmalion”, by
George Bernard Shaw, in the Main
Lounge, Tuesday at 8 p. m.
Daughter of Dr. and Mrs. A. D.
Folweiler, College Station, Mrs.
Routt attended schools here be
fore going to college. She is well
known in the community for her
singing talent as well as her dra
matic ability and has appeared in
many activties in these areas.
Some of Wiening’s experiences
have included, the Milwaukee Civic
Light Opera, Valparaiso Univer
sity Plays, L.S.U. Student Director
of Workshop Plays and others. He
is an asssitant professor in the
Department of English.
Monday night’s dance, to begin
at 8:30, will be in the lower level
in surroundings decorated to sug
gest the “Roaring Twenties”. Music
will be by the Aggieland Combo.
“The Times of Teddy Roosevelt”,
a Twentieth Century documentary
film describing our nation during
the times of the famous “Rough
Rider”, will open Sunday’s “After
noon of Free Films” at 2 p. m. in
the Ballroom.
Other films on schedule for the
afternoon are “The Thunderbirds”,
an Air Force documentary show
ing late developments in jet air
craft; “Kidnapped”, a capsule por
trayal of Robert Louis Stevenson’s
famous novel; and a travelogue,
“Europe and You”.
Week-Long Event
To Attract 325
Approximately 325 high school journalism students and
teachers will arrive here Sunday for the second annual High
School Publications Workshop to be held Sunday through
Friday.
The students and teachers will be from 78 high schools
in Texas and 4 out-of-state high schools, including a group
from Broaddus, Mont., High School, according to Donald D.
Burchard, head of the Department of Journalism, which is
sponsoring the workshop. Joseph E. Redden, assistant pro
fessor in the Department of Journalism, is workshop direc
tor.
Also sponsoring the workshop is the Texas Daily News
paper Assn, the Texas Press'*-
Fund Inc.
The students will be divided
into two groups while at the
workshop—yearbook and news
paper. In addition the newspaper
group will be subdivided into mi
meographed and printed sections.
Special lectures in photography
will be given to interested students
in both groups, according to Wes
ley D. Clavert, assistant professor
in the Department of Journalism
and in charge of the photography
lectures.
Special Address
Special addresses will be given
to the high school journalists and
their teachers by several top
names in Texas journalism. They
include Bill BarnaixL bureau chief,
The Associated Press, Dallas; Dick
Peebles, sports editor, The Houston
Chronicle; J. Q. Mahaffey, editor,
The Texarkana News-Gazette; Mrs.
Anne Roznovsky, news staff, Waco
News-Tribune; and Frank King,
executive editor, The Houston Post.
In addition, Don Carter, executive
director of the Newspaper Fund,
Inc., New York City, will give the
opening address of the workshop
Monday morning.
Register Sunday
The high school students and
teachers will begin registering Sun
day at 2 p. m. in the Memorial
Student Center and will have their
first meetings Sunday night.
The newspaper section students
will be reporters and editors on
their high school newspapers next
year and for practical experience
while at the workshop they will
be given assignements to interview
certain faculty and staff members
on the campus.
“The members of the faculty of
the Department of Journalism and
the workshop teaching staff hope
(See Journalism on Page 2)
Moyer Plans
Meteorology
NSF Lectures
Dr. Vance E. Moyer of the De
partment of Oceanography and
Meteorology, will deliver two lec
tures this month. The lectures will
be in the National Science Foumla-
tion-American Meteorological So
ciety of 1960 Visiting Scientists
Program at the Louisiana Poly
technic Institute, Rustona, La.
On July 28 Moyer, who is asso
ciate professor of meteorology and
coordinator of meteorology, will ad
dress a field biology program for
high school teachers and a mathe
matics-engineering program for
college teachers. He will talk on
“The Challenges and Opportunities
in the Modern Atmospheric Sci
ences.”
Moyer will be the banquet speak
er for the final exercises in the
Summer Science Institute for High-
Ability Secondary School Students,
July 29. His topic will be “The Sur
prisingly High Accuracy of Weath
er Forecasting.” All of these acti
vities are being conducted under
the sponsorship of the NSF, and
wall be the final participation of
Moyer in the 1960 NSF-AMS pro
gram.
On May 2, he visited the campus
of Panhandle A&M College, Good-
well, Okla., for a similar purpose;
on June 23 and 24, he presented
seminars in the atmospheric sci
ences in the NSF Summer Science
Institute for Secondary School
Teachers at Prairie View A&M.
This is the second year of Moyer’s
participation in this program of
visiting lecturers.
Vespers Program in All-Faiths Chapel
Special Service Set Sunday
A special vesper service of music
will be given Sunday at 3:30 p. m.
and 8 p. m. in the All-Faiths Chap
el under the sponsorship of the
A&M Presbyterian Church and the
All-Faiths Chapel.
The service will feature a 35-
voice choir and a 15-piece orches
tra, both under the direction of
Bill Guthrie, director of the A&M
Presbyterian Church choir.
Bryan and College Station resi
dents as well as some from Hous
ton make up the'two groups, ac
cording to Guthrie. Rehearsals
have been under way for more
than six weeks in preparation for
the presentation, Guthrie added.
The services, both of which will
be identical, will be open to the
public without charge.
The vesper service will consist
of parts. The first will be the
playing of Corelli’s “Concerto
Grosso”. The number will be done
by the string and cembelo portions
of the 15-piece orchestra. The
“Concerto” is a continuous piece
consisting of portions played by
a solo group with answers to the
portions by the remainder of the
orchestra.
The second part will be a pre
sentation of one of the lesser-
known works of Mozart, “Solemn
Vespers of Confession.” This
piece, one of two of its kind writ
ten by Mozart, consists of musical
presentations of Psalms 110, 111,
112, 113 and 117 and the magnifi-
cant, taken from St. Luke 1:45.
Soloists for the Mozart presenta
tion will be Mrs. William Guthrie
of College Station, soprano; Mrs.
Victor Junger of Houston, contra
lto; Herb Shaffer of College Sta
tion, tenor; and Bill Cunningham
of Houston, bass.
Mrs. A. B. Medlen of College
Station will be organist for the
presentation. The Rev. Norman
Anderson, pastor of the A&M
Presbyterian Church, will give the
invocation and benediction for the
services.
An offering will be taken at
the close of each of the two pre
sentations to help defray the ex
penses, Guthrie said.
Rehearsing for Vespers Service
Herb Shaffer, Mrs. Bill Guthrie, Mrs. A. B.
Medlen and Bill Guthrie rehearse for the
special vespers service to be presented Sun
day at 3:30 p. m. and 8 p. m. at the All-
Faiths Chapel. The program is being pre
sented under the sponsorship of the A&M
Presbyterian Church and the All-Faiths
Chapel. Shaffer and Mrs. Guthrie are solo
ists in the service, Mrs. Medlen is organist
and Guthrie is director.