i i— ■ Volume 6 The Battalion COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1962 Number 128 Summer ‘Aggie’ Hits Books \ jlanet Darrow, who is just a summer Aggie, being a regular • :udent at the University of Texas, hits the books this week —■> prep for the finals coming up tomorrow. Janet’s father, r. Robert Darrow, is a full-time Aggie, a professor in the epartment of Range and Forestry. D g|700 hie Firemen For School S c .pproximately 1,700 firemen expected to register for the 1 Annual Texas Firemen’s ining School to begin here July Chief Henry D. Smith of the men training program has an- nced. The training school will held through July 27. Imith indicated that there will thi’ee highlights for this year’s ining school. The basic fire- iting course which includes the ning and extinguishing of a i-room furnished house, train- in . sprinkler systems opera- s, and training in all types of extinguishers; the advanced fighting course which empha- s petroleum fires; and the in- ;rial firefighting course to con- irate on actual fire fighting of istrial fires. he delegate firemen are en- ed in fire prevention, control safety for municipalities, in- ries, and armed services, mtyi states and 425 cities will represented. Smith indicated, he training school is conducted 260 experienced instructors e available by municipalities, | istries, manufacturers, state federal agencies, and armed services. Equipment and supplies will be loaned or donated. Thirteen separate 30-hour train ing courses will be offered, Smith announce^!. Completion of the course with a grade of 70 or bet ter will result in a certificate for the department and the fireman, he added. Key rate insurance credit is given to Texas cities and towns for attendance and successful completion of the required course by respective firemen. Credits range from three to five per cent depending upon the number of firemen in attendance. The 1,700 firemen will be housed in the cadet dormitories located in the north section of the campus. Feeding facilities will be provided by Sbisa Dining Hall. The training school, under the auspices of the State Firemen’s and Fire Marshals’ Association of Texas, is conducted by the Engi neering Extension Service coop erating with the Industrial Edu cation Division of the Texas Edu cation Agency. Gigantic Grant Received To Form. Research Chair FOURTH ANNUAL H.S. Workshop Begins Sunday Registration for over 300 high school students and teachers will begin Sunday, July 15 at 3 p.m. for the fourth anuual A&M High School Journalism Workshop, Del bert McGuire, workshop director and head of the Department of Journalism, announced yesterday. Through Wednesday the regis tration had reached 303. The Workshop, largest single week conference of its kind in the nation, is designed to aid both students and advisors of high school newspapers and yearbooks in basic rudiments and advanced techniques of publication w 7 ork. During the 5-day program, stu dents will gather, edit and write news for the Sweatshopper, a mimeograph newspaper. They will use color for the first time in the mimeograph paper. At the same time another group of students will put out a letter- press newspaper called the Work- shopper. The A&M Press will print the paper. The students vcill write, edit and layout the news. Since sorpe high schools have mimeograph and lettei'press news papers, these two papers have been devised. The students will work on the type of newspaper they have at home. Still another group of students will work on and produce the Summertime ’62, a complete year book of the 5-day Workshop. The staff will layout the book, take pictures and write the cutlines. Their goal ;'is to finish the year book before the program is over Friday morning. The newspaper students 'will practice writing all types of stor ies—general news, features, sports and club and organizational news. They will also be taught about advertising and editing plus pro duce the newspapers. Photographers will be set into two classes-—beginners and ad vanced—and will take pictures for the two newspapers and the year book. President Earl Rudder will wel come the delegates to the Work shop on Monday morning at the first general session held in the Chemistry Building. A dance will be held at the Memorial Student Center Monday night. Nominations will be made for Miss Summertime ’62 Monday at the dance and she will be crowned at another dance Thurs day night. Three major speakers will be at the Workshop, according to Mc Guire. Paul Swensson, director of the Newspaper Fund, Inc., of New York City, will speak on a career in journalism. Walter Humphrey, editor of the Fort Worth Press, will talk on a “Newspaperman’s Love Affair.” Dr. Max Haddick, director of the Interscholastic League Press Association of Aus tin. will speak on high school newspapers. Humphrey will close out the Workshop by presenting awards after his speech on Friday morn ing. ROBERT L. BOONE . . . play co-director v,’ ^ /‘AW BILLIE JEAN BARRON .. . assists Boone ‘Anything Goes’ Sta rts Ton igh t The summer presentation of the MSC Entertainment Committee will be staged Thursday and Fri day nights at 8 in Guion Hall. Co-directors Robert L. Boone and Billie Jean Barron are pre senting “Anything Goes,” an adap- tattress overs Due regis- the Students who will not for a dormitory room ond six weeks of summer ool, including graduating sen- 3, must turn in their mattress ers before the end of the st summer term, Harry L. yer, housing manager, an- inced today. Covers will be turned in to B< warehouse beginning once. Turn-in should be com- ted by July 13. All students who will not at- Jd the second term of summer ool should turn in their room ns before leaving the campus, they fail to do this, they will e their $1 refund. inul Exam Schedule m. m i i fyyinal exam schedule for the ;$>t six weeks of summer school $jl be as follows: $j)n Thursday, July 12, at 7 l S;i;]i. will be the time for classes feting from 1-2:30 p.m. Friday, July 13, at 7 a.m. be exam time for classes /Jeting from 7-8:30 a.m. At a.m. will be exam time for sses meeting from 9-10:30 t. At 2 p.m. will be exam e for classes meeting from 12:30 p.m. tation of the play written by Cole Porter. A cast of 60, including an 18- piece orchestra, has been rehears ing for the presentation since the beginning of summer school. The story sees a New York stockbroker, Bill Crocker, meet an old sweetheart while seeing his boss off on a boat to Europe. Crocker accompanies his sweet heart on the boat—as a stowaway —and ends up ip Reno, the U.S. divorce center. Playing lead roles in the pre sentation are Jim Austin, as Crocker; Angie Harrison, Reno Sweeny; Moonface Martin, Bill Hite; Hope Harcort, Sally Wynn; and Evelyn Oakleigh, Bill Dansby. Admission prices are 75 cents for adults, 25 cents for children and no charge for holders of stu dent activity cards. Aggies At Summer Camp A group of Army ROTC cadets are receiv- camp. These Aggies are a part of the 1,500 ing instruction on the 106 Recoiless Rifle, men attending the training camp at Ft. Sill, while attending the QMS ROTC summer Okla. (U. S. Army Photo) Commission Defers Study Of A&M Coeds The latest plea for admission of women to A&M was deferred until October by the State Commission on Higher Education in a regular quarterly meeting in Austin Mon day. Members of the commission are considering the coed question after a woman member of the group asked for the consideration at a soring meeting. The commission deferred Mon day’s study to “have further time to study the question.” A&M also received approval for graduate degrees in general engi neering at the masters and doc toral level at the Monday meeting. The programs will go into ef fect this September with the be ginning of the fall semester. Work Scheduled In Chemistry A $650,000 grant from the Robert A. Welch Foundation has been accepted by the Board of Directors to establish a chair for research. President Earl Rudder said income from the grant will be used to endow a professorship known as the “Robert A. Welch Chair of Chemistry.” “It is with great pride that we at A&M accept this generous gift from the Robert A. Welch Foundation,” Rud der said. “This endowment will enable A&M to enhance its programs of excellence in science.” Established by the will of Robert Alonzo Welch, a Hous ton philanthropist, in 1952, the foundation has now approved a total of more than $8.6 mil-'* 1 lion to foster and encourage fundamental research in chemistry in Texas. “The Robert A. Welch Chair in Chemistry” for which this endowment is made will be per petual and actively maintained by A&M permanently, according to foundation trustees. The trustees are Daniel R. Bul lard, chairman of board of direc tors of the Mound Company^ Wil fred T. Doherty, Mound Company president; Lester Settegast, gen eral counsel for the company; and Rogert J. Wolfe, president of Wolfe Oil and Gas Company. The A&M Department of Chem istry has long been in integral part of scientific education at the col lege, oldest state-supported insti tution of higher learning in Texas. It currently has 21 full-time faculty members who haveYeceived their formal education in 34 dif ferent academic institutions. They are assisted by 38 graduate stu dents and post-doctoral fellows. Also within the department is the Chemical Thermodynamic Proper ties Center, sponsored by the Ame- ican Petroleum Institute and the Manufactui’ing Chemist Associa tion. The center is devoted to re search studies leading to best or critical data on “key” compounds. Arlington Classrooms Integrated The A&M System announced plans late Tuesday to integrate classrooms at Arlington State College, beginning with the open ing of the fall semester next Sep tember. Under the plan Arlington will become the first school in the vast A&M System to integrate. Dr. J. R. Wolf, president of the college, said the action came after the school asked the System Board of Directors to specifically con sider integration at the school. Dr. M. T. Harrington, chancellor of the System, said the ruling for Arlington had no effect on A&M or any otlrer schools in the Sys tem.- Harrington added that any other school in the System desiring in tegration would first have to ask for consideration from the direc tors as Arlington did. The Arlington school, which only recently became a four-year col lege, is located between Dallas and Fort Worth Whitmore Named NASA Coordinator Dr. Frank C. Whitmore has been named Coordinator for • National Aeronautics and Space Adminis tration Affairs and Programs at A&M, President Earl Rudder has announced. Whitmore, a research physicist, has returned to A&M from Pasa dena, Calif., where he was as sociated with the physics division of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology. He formerly was on the physics faculty. Chief purpose of the new post is to assist in setting up academic and research programs helpful to the needs of NASA, Rudder said. The NASA Coordinator’s Office will be administered under the Texas Engineering Experiment Station. “We are very pleased to have Dr. Whitmore back on the staff so that we may benefit from his experience in space-related re search programs,” Rudder said. “His duties will include assist ing members of the faculty and staff in any way possible to ex plore areas of interest to NASA leading to research proposals and projects,” he added. All»faculty and research staff members in terested in developing possible NASA projects should see Whit more. A native of Baltimore, Md., Whitmore has an A.B. degree from Gettysburg College and an M.S. degree in physics at the Univer- 1 sity of Delaware. He came to A&M in 1951 and received his doc torate in physics here in 1960. During World War II he served with the Marine Corps on Guam, Okinawa and in China. Marshall Plan Scholarships Now Available For 1963-65 Details concerning the Marshall Scholarships program for 1963- 65 now are available at the office of the Dean of the Graduate School The program provides for two years of study for degrees at Bri tish universities. Applications for scholarships for tenure commencing in October of 1963 must be received not later than Oct. 22, 1962. The British Government estab lished the Marshall Scholarships in 1953, as a gesture of thanks for Marshall Plan Aid. The program enables 24 Ameri can graduates to study in a wide range of subjects including the sci ences and the humanities. Each award has a basic value of 550 British pounds a year*, plus fares and tuition fees. Further details may be obtained at the office of the Graduate School dean.