so lit Irifs eU| lyway St, lit smIJ i ;aW '1 w i starteii fcl it tolled i ' ‘Goodwill’ Ag Returns... See Page 4 Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1962 Number 5 library Facilities To Double By ’65 Expansion Cost $1.5 Will Million WILLIAM J. GRAFF ARCHITECT’S DRAWING OF LIBRARY Bonfire Work Is Organized For Fast Two-Day Effort Committees were formed and other organizational plans formu lated during the first meeting of this year’s bonfire committee late Tuesday. Details for this year’s blaze, set Tuesday, Nov. 20, will be more crowded than ever before— with two full working days lost from a year ago. Since the Texas game is in Aus tin, the bonfire will burn Tuesday Football Trip Might Fold No tickets have been sold yet for the planned bus trip to the Aggie-University of Florida football game Oct. 13, Heady Yell Leader Bill Brashears reported Wednesday, t Deadline for purchasing tickets is next Monday at 5 p. m. the Student Finance Window of the Memorial Student Center. Brashears admitted Wednesday that the outlook for the proposed trip was dim and that the excursion might have to be cancelled. An overall fee of $31.10, plus individual expenses, has leen negotiated for the trip. Arrangements have also been ade to carry along dates, wives or other guests at the same rate. The buses, if the trip is carried out, will leave Houston the morning of Oct. 12, arrive in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday norning and start back for Texas after the afternoon game. They would reach Houston Sunday afternoon. United Fund Drive Campaigns Lauded, Preparations Still Underway Here September, October and Novem ber have been proclaimed United Community Campaign Months in Texas by Gov. Price Daniel, who las urged all Texans “to partici- iate generously in the campaigns which are carried on in their local :ommunities.” The governor issued his procla- nation with Frank H. Heller of Dallas, campaign chairman for the Texas United Fund and Maurice Acers of Austin, board chairman of the fund, representing all Unit ed campaigns in Texas. The official proclamation was is sued as United Funds and Com munity Chests all over the state prepared for their drives. United campaigns in Texas last fall raised over $26 million to aid health, wel fare and character-building a- gencies. A date or campaign goal for the College Station United Chest drive has not yet been set. Chair man Dr. G. M. Watkins was out- of-town Wednesday, but publicity director Delbert McGuire said a meeting was on tap in the next two weeks to work out all details. instead of Wednesday. And the A&M Convocation is on tap Friday, Nov. 16, a day usually devoted exclusively to working. As in the past, classes will be dismissed Monday, leaving stu dents two full days to work — Sunday and Monday. The Rice game in Houston is Saturday and Avill be attended by many. PRESENT PLANS call for stacking to begin as early as Thursday, with civilians and volun teer corps students) cutting and hauling as much wood as possible in the cutting area. Civilians are planning to con tinue work through the corps’ ab sence Friday and Saturday and then join in during the full days Sunday and Monday. Voluntary work in the cutting area will be encouraged the entire week before the bonfire. Even with this head-start and civilian assistance, stacking may be extended to a 24-hour schedule, chief coordinator Bill Brashears ex plained. The first cranes will be in the stacking area Thursday as the center pole goes up the same day. Civilians will work primarily cut ting and hauling logs, with full- scale stacking expected to be under way by early Sunday. OILING, AS in the past, will be conducted immediately before the gigantic stack is ignited. John R. Pedigo of the Department of Pe troleum Eugineering will be in charge. Other persons heading coordi nating committees include: Kirk Blackard, personnel; Andy Schdulla, transportation and equip ment; Clayton B. Lyle, cutting area; Dennis Graham, food; David M. Richardson, oiling; ‘Policy, Procedures Manual Planned For College Use % The college is planning a fac ulty-staff “Policy and Procedures Manual,” according to an official memorandum from Tom Cherry, director of business affairs. He said: “The purpose is to provide a con venient single reference on pol icies and procedures for use by the faculty and staff. “Information will be in sufficient detail for the majority of reference purposes and will be supplemented "^th a list of other sources and cross references where more de tailed information can be found.” Director Cherry said the man ual, as now envisioned, would in clude sections on the following subjects: Basic policy, administrative rou tines, personnel, employe benefits, fiscal regulations and school and department memoranda. Cherry said the latter section would be reserved for intra-school use. He said: “The manual will be in loose-leaf forrq to facilitate revisions. Dis tribution is planned .to all heads of departments.” Cherry has asked for suggestions on items that should be included. He said recommendations and com ments on format would also be helpful so the manual could be of maximum convenience to its users. * 3 jrir ' Jerry Moore, finance and suppl ies; Dale Sinor, lighting; Alan Payne, publicity; John Blackburn, center pole; Paul Vilvoa, traffic and safety; John Hedrick, stacking; Jim Adams, radios; Jeff. Harp, civiL ians; and yell leaders Brashears, Gene Anderson, Tom Nelson, Mike Dodge and Frank Summers, co ordinators. Tessies Name 30 Sweetheart Semifinalists TWC students have chosen 30 semifinalists for Aggie Sweet heart, The Battalion learned Wed nesday. The 30 were chosen from the main campus and nursing cen ters in Dallas and Houston. The field will be trimmed to 12 finalists this week-end, with the sweetheart being named the week of Oct. 8-13. The sweetheart will be formally presented at the TCU game in Fort Worth Oct. 20. Senior semifinalists include Sha ron Clark of Dallas, Kathy Coffey of Sulphur Springs, Marge Cris well of Millersview, Jean Elsass of Wellington, Kan., Caroline Far ris of Waxahachie, Tina Lamborn of Winter Park, Fla., Gail Pope of La Grange, 111., Janice Pruitt of Richardson and Mary Youngblood of Beeville. Junior semifinalists are Lou Ellyn Coffey of Ferris, Carolyn Franklin of Elysian Fields, Betsey Larkin of Dallas, Lee Martin of Jourdanton, Ruth Palacios of San Antonio, Tillie Ragsdale of Killeen, Frances Smith of Marshall, Bobbie Sue Stephenson of Sinton, Maxine Varisco of Houston, Gail Wallace of Daingerfield and Carol Wardlaw of Denton. Sophomore semifinalists are Dot- tie Carter, Ann Clark and Betty Langford of Dallas, Joanna Coffey of Sulphur Springs, Carlen Mabry of Batesville, Ark., Ellen Mattison of San Francisco, Lynn Parks of St. Joseph, La., Judy Rotramel of Devine, Juanita Rowland of Ray- mondville and Betsy Welburn of Port Arthur. FLOODS RIP SPAIN Raging Waters Slap Chief City A&M will expand its library facilities at a cost of $1.5 million. Additions and remodeling will more than double existing floor space. Preliminary drawings are being prepared to enlarge the present Cushing Library building, erected in 1929, and to build around and over the Texas Engineers’ Library building. Library Director Robert A. Houze said construction may be started next summer with completion in 1965. “The emphasis in the new building will be upon bringing together the undergraduate student and library materials,” Houze said. The present Cushing Library building will be oriented to serve graduated- students. “This doesn’t mean that graduates and under graduates can’t use all of the facilities, however” he added. THE NEW construction will be two stories and linked architec turally with existing facilities. Later stages of construction will provide two additional stories to add space deemed adequate for the College’s library needs through 1996. Ultimate cost of the expan sion program is estimated at $3,- 800,000. Houze, who with Dean of In struction William J. Graff and a firm of Dallas architects, has been studying library building construc tion and arrangement for almost an entire year. Houze said: “We estimate this first stage of .construction will carry us for about 10 years. Then additional floors will be added. “One of the most important things about the new facilities is the fact that material will be or ganized into divisions.” THE DIRECTOR said the divi sions would be those for social sciences, the humanities, physical sciences, life sciences and govern ment documents. All related pe riodicals will be shelved with the particular division, Houze said. “Students will learn that what they need will be in a certain di vision,” he added. Houze told The Battalion that plans were being considered to provide an open-round-the-clock air-conditioned study area for stu dents. Other innovations will be the availability of individual study areas with lockers for graduate students, a rare books section, mi cro photograph section, typing rooms and seminar rooms. THE FIRST stage of the con struction program, plus existing facilities, will provide 650,000 vol umes and seat 1,500 students. Present holdings of the Cushing Library and its branches are 425,- 000 volumes, and seating is avail able for fewer than 600 students in all libraries combined. The construction is being (See LIBRARY Page 3) ROBERT A. HOUZE BARCELONA, Spain CP)—Flash flpods from drought-breaking rain storms ripped through industrial centers of the Barcelona area early Wednesday, killing hundreds of people and destroying many fac tories, homes and bridges. By nightfall, more than 333 bod ies had been reported recovered. Officials said hundreds of persons were missing. The injured totaled at least 1,000. Damage estimates ranged over $14 million. IT WAS THE WORST natural disaster in the modern history of Spain, eclipsing the 1959 tragedy that killed 300 in the village of Rivadelago in central Spain in wa ters from a collapsing dam. The destruction centered in a heavily populated industrial com plex of roughly 150 square miles fanning north and west of Barce lona, a Mediterranean port of two million that is Spain’s chief in dustrial and commercial city. Fed by a nine-hour rainfall, flood waters pushed along by hur ricane-force winds crumpled indus trial plants and cottages in their path. Many persons died in their sleep as their homes fell under the combined forces of wind and wa ter. Others died at work, trapped in collapsed buildings. HARDEST HIT WAS Tarrasa, an industrial city of 120,000 in a hilly region about 10 miles north west of Barcelona. In the evening rescue workers said Tarrasa had accounted for 150 of the bodies re covered and predicted the town’s total dead would pass 200. The bodies of 78 workers were found in one Tarrasa textile plant alone. They were unable to es cape before the wave of flood- waters collapsed the building, trapping them inside. “It was something fantastic,” said Carlos P. Martorell, one of the few survivors from the mill. “I DON’T KNOW what hell is like, but it could not be worse than that flood.” Four other textile mills and two brick factories were destroyed in Tarrasa. Flood waters there swept away more than 100 homes and 450 automobiles. Barcelona itself escaped major damage, but some areas were flooded. Prayers In Schools Are Permitted, If State Does Not Write Them AUSTIN (A*)—Texas children can pray in the public schools pro dded the state does not write the prayers or require that they be said. Atty. Gen. Will Wilson held that a recent U.S. Supreme Court de cision outlawing certain prayers in New York schools has a narrow implication, only rejecting “as un constitutional any effort by gov ernmental bodies or agencies U compose, prescribe, support oi place its approval upon any par ticular prayer . . .” The opinion went to State Com missioner of Education J. W. Ed gar. mmm ' w : J§| TOM CHERRY Suttle Joins Defense Staff Dr. A. D. Suttle Jr., vice-presi dent for research at A&M, will take a leave of absence to serve as deputy director for a special staff group in research and engi neering for the Department of De fense. His appointment will become ef fective Oct. 1. The special staff group is one of the major divisions of research and engineering in the Department of Denfense, coordinating activit ies of other divisions in research and engineering. Presbyterian Student Center The old College Station State Bank building at the North Gate has been converted to A&M’s newest religious student center. Under campus minister Rev. Arlen L. Fowler the new Presbyterian center is holding an open house Sunday from 4 to 5:30 p. m. to show off its new quarters now in the process of being refurnished. Formal dedication services will be presided over by Dr. William A- Baine of Bellaire. Wire Review By the Associated Press WORLD NEWS CORK, Ireland—Survivors of a ditched American airliner, many of them tough paratroopers, sang “Glory, Glory Hallelujah,” and re cited the Lord’s Prayer together as 10-foot waves tossed their raft around like a toy for five hours before their rescue. This and other graphic accounts of the nightmare Atlantic ordeal were given Wednesday by injured survivors lifted by helicopter to a hospital here from the Swiss freighter Celerina. They came ashore thanking God, their pilot and their navigator for the rescue. ★ ★ ★ O T T A W A — Canada’s 25th Parliament convenes Thursday against a backdrop of financial crisis and political turmoil that threaten to overthrow Prime Minister John G. Diefenbaker’s minority government. A motion to declare no-confi- dence in his regime is expected to be presented early in the ses sion. U.S. NEWS WASHINGTON —The Internal Revenue Service announced Wed nesday an unprecedented nation wide drive to seize up to $5 million of the proceeds from Tuesday night’s heavyweight title fight be tween Sonny Liston, the new cham pion, and Floyd Patterson. IRS said the pui-pose was to make certain that organizers of the fight pay an estimated $3.9 million in taxes on their receipts. The coast-to-coast money hunt took revenue officers into theaters and corporate offices in 217 cities in 46 states. The carefully planned operation—the most extensive in IRS history—was kept secret until agents with synchronized watches moved into 260 theaters at the start of a closed-circuit telecast of the Chicago fight. ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON — Army engi neers recommended Wednesday to the Budget Bureau that the Brazos River Project in Texas be modified to include three new projects that would involve an additional au thorization of $20,250,000. The project now has an author ized cost of $40,450,000.