■ahchivh ?i A Big Aggie Howdy To Class Of ’66 open e Aii* President Greets Class of 1966 To the class of ’66: | The faculty and staff join me in extending- to you a in varm welcome to the Agricultural and Mechanical College >f Texas. You have chosen a college which has made an nviable record in educational achievement for over 85 years, rone § All of us are dedicated to the task of developing each wo tudent to the maximum of his capabilities - mentally, physi- i mi ally and spiritually. We seek to accomplish this by provid- iat, ng outstanding professors, who want you to grow academical- v. We offer you fine facilities, including well-equipped lab- ratories, stimulating programs and healthful living condi- ions. You face a real challenge as you begin your college areer at A&M. The work will not be easy. The demands laced upon you here will be considerably greater than those ou ,have experienced in high school. Also, most of you must nake the adjustment of living away from home and its amiliar surroundings. There may be times when you will lecome discouraged and wonder whether the efforts is worth while. On these occasions you should be strengthened by he knowledge that attainment of the good things in life often equires unusual effort, and that the advantage of a higher ducation is one of the greatest benefits anyone can enjoy. You have the opportunity to secure a very fine education ere. We hope that you will take advantage of this opportuni- V and fully prepare yourself to join thousands of former tudents of Texas A&M who occupy important and rewarding ositions throug-hout our American society. They have stablished an enviable record for competence in their profes- ions and willing acceptance of the duties and responsibilities f citizenship. These should be your objectives in pursuing our education here. Again, a most sincere welcome to Aggieland. May your ears here be both productive and happy ones. Earl Rudder President Texas A&M The TALION Volume COLLEGE STATION, TE*XAS THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1962 Number 134 Nor Ih S^ork Gate Street Progresses Work progresses in beautifying d improving traffic flow in the nth Gate area by converting mston Street to a major en- ince r exit for the college. W. Howard Badgett, manager the physical plant here, said e use of Houston as the major oroughfare would improve traf- ■ circulation to and from the n-th Gate as well as provide ad- :ional parking space near the st office and eliminate hazards volved in parking on a main reet. Previously, Houston and Bell reets were used as double en- ance-exit points fi’om the north. m :cent construction has closed Bell . the intersection of Farm Road n, with that section of street con- Jrted into parking space. The Brking area will accommodate 27 rs and will be laid out for one- ay traffic in the interest of fety, Badgett said. Landscaping the new North JMate thoroughfare will begin in W e fall. Plans call for a college axker there similar to the one Highway 6 near the East Gate, idgett noted. The beautification and traffic tudent Passes All PA Examinations An A&M graduate student is 41 on his way to becoming a irtified Public Accountant — once gets a year’s experience. Edmund P. Winston, Jr., gradu- e student from Lufkin, passed all irts [of the CPA examination this ring the first time he took the am. It is unusual for a college stu nt without public accounting ex- rience to achieve this success, R. . Stevenson, acting head of the ivision of Business Administra- >n, said. System Man Named issistant Registrar Roy D. Hickman has assumed \JL e position of assistant registrar •‘•S ^ -successor to Milton Edge, . Lloyd Heaton, director of ad- !;•;« issions and registrar, has an- $3 unced. Hickman has been employed for past four years as foreign aining advisor in the Office of >reign Programs of the A&M r stem. He was graduated from |p. in 1954 with a major in ricultural education and in 1960 ceived a master’s degree with a ajor in the same field of study. Mr. and Mrs. Hickman reside at 07 Carter Creek Parkway in Br- n and have one daughter. circulation improvement program is part of a 10-year-old plan of the physical plant. The appear ance of the North Gate entrance has become increasingly important due to the number of visitors ar riving at Easterwood Airport. They receive their first view of A&M at the North Gate, Badgett pointed out. “The overall plan is to elimin ate traffic turning into a moving lane of vehicles,” he said. He added that the college hoped that in cooperation with the City of College Station a traffic signal synchronized with the existing one at FM 60 and Main could be in stalled at the New Houston inter section with FM 60. Board Backing* Plans Plans for improving the appear ance of this section of the campus have the enthusiastic backing of the A&M Board of Directors. Projects under study by the Texas Highway Department and the city to develop an underpass to carry FM 60 traffic under the railroad tracks west of the new thoroughfare would add to the program, Badgett said. Intensive development of Hous ton Street is underway now that the underpass development seems certain, he said. EARL RUDDER . .. President of A&M 6 Credit Card Planned For CP’s Fall Students will have something new in the way of identification after registering for the fall se mester this year. Plans for issuing identification cards similar in appearance to gaspline company credit cards have been announced by Dean of Stu dents James P. Hannigah. He be lieves the system should quickly prove its value. The Library, Memorial Student Center and Fiscal Office are re ported considering systems to de rive the most benefits to all con cerned from use of the new ID cards. “We expect that other uses for the new card will evolve,” Hannigan said. The student’s name, an identify ing number, and his age will be embossed into the card, like > a credit card, which will be used to imprint this information. Photograph, Too A photograph of the student will be attached to the back of the card. The plans are to make the photograph and have it ready for delivery within ten seconds, How ard Berry, manager of the Pho tographic and Visual Aids Labora- tory^ said. He indicated that a number of students available to work during the registration period will be needed and asked interested per sons to contact the Student Em ployment Office. Hannigan said a $1 fee for the card will be charged to cover the costs of materials and preparation. The new cards will be good for 12 months. New Card Helps Plans for the new system have been developed over a period of months. The aim was to develop a card which would have the great est value to the student as he identifies himself at many places on and off the campus, while also providing a degree of control so that persons not enrolled at the College could not easily use such cards. COME PREPARED TO LEARN' Dean Hints Of Students Issues To Help Freshmen New Student Orientation Begins Sept. 12 Battalion Issue Designed For Fish, Families You as prospective freshmen at A&M this year are the peo ple for whom this edition of The Battalion is designed. It is hoped that you, and your families will find stories in this edition which will give a better insight and understand ing of the background and pres ent conditions of the school which we hope you will call your second home for four or more years as you strive toward one or more degrees. The first section contains news of current events at the college plus several stories of general interest about the campus and campus life. Section Two is designed to give the student and his par ents some idea about the school, its size, its facilities, its people, and its goals. Many of the facts contained in this section will be of interest to friends and fami ly as much as to the new stu dent. Section Three will give the student some idea of the lighter side of life at A&M, outlining the activities which are found here, as well as the opportunit ies for work and leisure time activities outside the school. Major among these is the amount of church activity in which the Aggies participate. Section Four is devoted to sports activity at A&M and a- round the Southwest Conference. It will give the readers some idea as to how the Aggie team stacks up with other teams, both in football and other sports. During the school year, The Battalion is written and edited by students and is published daily Tuesday through Friday afternoons. Meetings, High Ugh t Talks Week A week of meetings, checking in and getting acquainted is anticipated beginning Sunday, Sept. 9 as the Class of ’66 begins to arrive for registration. Students who choose to report early for the counseling and testing program rather than participating during the summer are to begin arriving Sunday. They will report to the Housing Office for room assignments and then begin taking placement tests at 8 a. m. Monday in the Chemistry Lecture Room. Those students who completed the testing period in the summer will report sometime during the day Wednesday to the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. C. H. Ransdell, assistant to* the Dean of Engineering and chairman of the New Student Orientation Committee, said yesterday that all students who are coming to A&M for the first time, with the exception of transfer students "who did not par ticipate in the testing periods should arrive on campus Wednes day. They should come in time to secure room assignments and keys, g^t uniform authorization ^ and check in. with representatives of the school and the company officer or house master in the dormitory. Wednesday evening at 7 a gen eral assembly of all new students is scheduled for G. Rollie White Coliseum, at which Singing Cadets Director Robert Boone will lead the group in singing. President Earl Rudder will welcome the class to A&M, and the new stu- Rudders 9 Brother Dies In Menard Lawrence Williamson of Men ard, brother of Mrs. Earl Rud der, died in Menard early today. Services for the prominent rancher will be held at 4 p.m. Friday. Other arrangements are pending at the Mission Funeral Home in Menard. President and Mrs. Earl Rud der are in Menard. dent will get a look at the student body president for 1962-63, Shel don Best. Thursday Morning Events All students will meet with representatives of the various schools in special assemblies Thurs day morning. Agriculture majors will meet with Dr. R. C. Potts, assistant director of Agricultural Instruction, in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. All Arts and Sciences majors will meet with Dr. G. W. Schlesselman in Guion Hall. Shclesselman is associate dean of the School of Arts and Sciences. All Business Administration ma jors will meet with Dan C. Lowe, student advisor for the division, in the Chemistry Lecture Room on the second floor of the Chemistry Building. Engineering majors are to meet in G.~ Rollie White Coliseum with Ransdell, and Pre-Veterinary Med icine majors will meet in the Audi torium, Room 201 Veterinary Medi cine Building. Dr. E. D. McMurry, assistant to the Dean of Veterinary Medicine will preside. Registration Begins The first of many lines which must be joined and passed through begins Thursday afternoon with registration in Sbisa Hall from 1-5. That night the local ministers will be introduced to the students (See ORIENTATION on Page 3) By ROBBIE D. GODWIN Battalion Editor Freshmen entering A&M receive all sorts of instructions in the form of booklets, advertising mat ter, and official memos before they arrive on the A&M campus to be gin their education. However, smaller items, some times not covered in these official guides, can do even more toward preparing a freshman for life at A&M. Dean of Students James P. Han nigan was asked to compile a brief summary of suggestions, based on his experience, to help the fresh man off to a better start. “Don’t try to show how much you know at first,” Hannigan’s first statement said. “Better to realize how little you know and to add to that as much as possible in a short time 1 .” Secondly he said, “A&M has a goal of excellence toward which it is building — excellence in stud ies, research, athletics, morals and spiritual attitudes. Start working for this excellence at once.” “Grades are important. This be comes very obvious as one ap proaches graduation. Accept the fact now and you will not have to catch up later. Grades are a mea sure of how much you are the master of the skills and subjects which you study.” Hannigan also asked the co operation of the students in one phase of their life here. “We are working on plans for new dormitories to house 1,000 more students. Meanwhile, please bear with us if you find yourself crowded three to a room. There have been times when all rooms had three students and there were even times when most students lived in tents.” The Dean pointed with pride at some of the accomplishments of A&M lately, and challenged the freshmen to make the most of them. “The outdoor Olympic Swimming Pool is new. The 14 handball courts in De Ware Field House are new. So are many classrooms and lab oratories. Enjoy all these new facilities. More are coming,” he said. Speaking in terms of long- range goals, Hannigan warned the \ entering student not to expect i miracles — that the process of I building anything is long and tedi- : ous. “A&M produces MEN, but we | have no magic formula for ‘instant | men’,” Hannigan emphasized. “It; takes four years to build men. We j receive mostly teen-agers as fresh- j men. We graduate only men.” There are times when the fresh- j men begin to wonder about his , position on the campus, too. Han- ! nigan again had some good advice 1 for him, particularly when look ing down the barrel of a red-hot sophomore. “If a sophomore appears unduly pompous, remember — he’s as green at being an upperclassman as you are at being a college stu dent. You both have a lot to learn.” Consolidated This pretty group of misses will be a famil- • iar sight at this fall’s A&M Consolidated High School football games as they take the field for the half-time shov/s. The Bengal Belles, pride of CHS, include this year (left Drill Team to right) Captain Carolyn Parker, Diane Hooper, Peggye Breazeale, Peggy Ames, Pam Adkins, June Bearden, Jan Butler, Ann Kirby, Julie Goode, Candy Garner, Leslie Kelley, Judy Morgan and Susie Stevenson.