Volume 60 Cbe Battalion COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1963 Tennis Camp Opens ».. See Page 3 Number 122 ns, 6-1, 21i fert who itandout foi s one of sii in Saturda! -America p i is schedulij professional can Leaptl 1, reported id coach, S ohn McKaj with anotkd Baker, ai College Station Fourth Of July Fete Planned ppi States insin’s uad. rill have 3! piate perfoa •actices wi! til Friday. Plans for the annual Fourth of July family carnival and fireworks display in College Station were announced Tuesday by project chairman Chester Meinecke of the College Station Lions Club. Activities will beeln at 5 p.m. - * rhursdav at the A&M Consoli- lated High School stadium. Conservation and spectate According’ to Rob Schleider, en- uffalo’s H's ^rtainmeut chairman, entertain- for the m will include sack races, ladies eh will be| w iij n g- p,’ n races, three-legged by the Ai faces anc } 0 ther contests for all company, t 1 | eSi Prize watermelons will be American Fi jwar( ] e( ] i n each contest, ation. I Schleider said one feature of the HopkiEi [arn j va i games will be a dunking pe Co-Capip where a good throw with a ong with b [ i;ise ] 1a ]] w j]] c i un k a prominent Itizen in a vat of water, football coa College Station Lions will man r, Hank concession stands. Meinecke said Bar-B-Que, as well as hot dogs, ice cream, snow cones and cold drinks will he favorable. Bar- B-Que plates will cost .$1.25 for adults and $1.00 for children. “the best Hf coached" ait! ining sessitd AS a conserfl former his a ie of the first' he centers!'- ir y of m ^ uncil) wil] begin at 8 p m Tay . September, \ggie foothls lor Reidel, fireworks chairman, es timated that over 4,000 people post-seasod witnessed the display last year, s a starter - eV(?ri £ bas g rown each ay clas a- y ear „ be sa j ( ] ; “ an( j we will have me of our most impressive dis- flays this year. It is really a cred it to our community.” of the Soatl f three Cadets in pro rank 1 ack Lee Bor I kicking ace I the Philadi National W The fireworks display, sponsored by the College Station Recreation Bryan Bank Will Erect New Building The First State Bank & Trust Company, which has two directors from the college staff and faculty, nil erect a new home in downtown Bryan, Bank President Henry B. Clay announced. The modern facility will be lo- \ tated on the block of land east . if the Brazos County Courthouse ® Highway 6. Plans include drive-in windows and parking space, Clay said. “We hope to start actual con- i|u itruction this September,” he con- ™ tinued. Fifteen months will be I required for completion. I For $l! Quart $ . 1-Lb, ft Clay pointed out that First State Bank had outgrown its present lo- ( ation at 200 North Main Street “and we were unable to expand there.” Clay said the bank has plans to Pcrease its combined capital and surplus to $1,000,000 prior to ac- rupying the new home. . 1-Lb.« . 1-Lb.:» “This new capital structure,” he Uoted, “will enable the bank to dandle an individual loan up to 1*250,000 without assistance from torrespondent banks.” ..1-Lb.* . Mb. * Jim Lindsey, director of college ^formation, and Robert L. Smith, Jr, head of the Data Processing Center, are directors of the First State Bank. Workshop Will Begin Monday Farming and conservation alter natives in the East Texas Timber- lands and Coastal Prairies will be accented during the annual Con servation Workshop Monday and Tuesday at A&M. Lynn Pittard, soil conservation ist with the Texas Agricultural Ex tension Service and workshop co- chairman, said the program also will consider wildlife and recrea tional opportunities for both areas. V. W. Woodman of the Soil Con servation Service in Fort Worth is program co-chairman with Pittard. Co-chairmen for the Wildlife and Recreational Committee are Vernon Hicks of Temple, SCS, and Ivan Schemedemann of A&M; East Texas Timberlands Commit tee, Don Young, Texas Forest Service, and G. M. Monas of Tem ple, SCS; Coastal Prairie, R. J. Miears of A&M and Phil Price of Temple, SCS. The program will open at 8:30 a.m. the first day in the Memorial Student 'Center with short talks by Dr. R. E. Patterson, dean of ag riculture at A&M, and H. N. Smith of Temple, State Conservationist with the SCS. Next will be a discussion of “Operation Build East Texas” by E. M. Trew, Extension Service pas ture specialist, and “Single” En terprise-Conservation Practice Ap proach to Conservation Planning” by Rex Kennedy of A&M, econo mist in management. Sanity Hearing Set For Defendant In Heaton Kidnaping Geradus F. Hauwert, 35, the man being held for the June 12 kidnaping and robbery of Regis trar H. L. Heaton, will face a pre- f trial sanity hearing at 9 a.m. July 16 in the 85th. Judicial District Court in Bryan. The hearing had been previously set for Tuesday but Judge John M. Barron announced the postpone ment late yesterday. Hauwert is under indictment for kidnaping and extortion. Barron said the purpose of the sanity hearing is to determine if the de fendant was sane at the time of his alleg’ed act and if he is sane at the present time. ' The former mechanical engineer ing student at A&M is being held without bond in the Brazos County Jail. Houston attorney Clyde Woody is handling Hauwert’s de fense. 1-Lb. ? 2-Lbs. ft Mb. > 2 For 9 2-Lbs. 9 2-Lbs. ft ✓ E 27 • 28 >D (El E STAT# DAVID WOODCOCK Texas’ Official Liberty Bell Replica As part of the “Make Freedom Ring” cam- Haupt, left, of Post 735; Boy Scout Jerry paign four scouts examine the copy in the Nanice, who traces his ancestry to include Academic Building. Touching the bell is 12 men in the American Revolutionary Boy Scout David H. Alsmeyer of Troop 102. Army. The fathers of all four serve on the Cub Scout Rodney Baker of Pack 802 is A&M Campus, kneeling, standing are Explorer Lewis MAKE FREEDOM^ RING ’ Scouts’ July 4th Program Has Special Meaning Here The Boy Scouts’ “Make Freedone Ring” program July 4 has a spe cial meaning on the A&M campus for here is the State of Texas’ of ficial replica of the Liberty Bell. The nearly two-ton replica was presented to the State of Texas during ceremonies on a hot July afternoon in 19!?0. Allan Shivers* then governor of Texas, presented the bell to A&M in recognition of the outstanding patriotic record of Texas Aggies. ACCEPTING THE bell for A&M was Dr. M. T. Harrington, then president of the College and now chancellor of the A&M System. The hell was one of 53 exact replicas cast in France, displayed in this country on behalf of the U.S. Savings Bond program, and then given to the states. Boy Scouts of the Sam Houston Area Council are cooperating in the national “Make Freedom Ping” program. The council includes Houston and Harris County and 15 , area counties. Scout units of the council are urged to contact churches and schools having bells and to obtain permission to ring the bells for two minutes, beginning at 12 noon July 4. President Kennedy and Gov. John Connally have issued procla mations urging Americans to ring bells at noon on the Fourth of July to remind all citizens of their pre cious American heritage. THE COPY of the Liberty Bell at A&M is housed in the rotunda of the Academic Building- at the center of the campus. The bell hangs from an oak beam between two supports. A g’lass case pro tects the bell and also helps keep thing's quieter in the Academic Building by preventing passers-by from ringing the bell. Navy officers, beekeepers, tech- ers, policemen, bankers, ranchers, high school journalists and fire men are among more than 6,500 Texans who will attend short cours es and conferences at A&M the next six months. Young and old, they come to gain the latest information in their spec ial field of interest. The tentative schedule for the July through December period shows 46 short courses or confer ences. Some involve a handful of people, others will attract sev eral hundi’ed Texans to the A&M campus. Largest event for the six months is the firemen’s training school scheduled July 21-26 under spon sorship of the Texas Engineering The case was removed recently so four local scouts could ring- the bell while tape recording machines recorded the sound for area radio and television stations. Inscribed on one of the two plaques beside the bell is a fitting reminder to all who pass: “Dedicated to You, A Free Citi zen in A Free Land.” Extension Service. Approximately 1,500 men are expected. The 4-H Roundup held in June nearly 1,900 registered is the larg est conference of the year. The Texas Agricultural Extension Serv ice is the sponsor . The short course office registered 6,341 persons for 23 courses during the first six months. The extension services, A&M in structional departments, Texas Ti’anspoi'tation Institute and others sponsor the conferences. The Department of Journalism sponsors the high school journalism workshop, July 14-19, with more than 300 persons expected. The Department of Animal Husbandry sponsors the Beef Cattle Short Course, July 29-31. Expected at tendance is 225 persons. 6,500 Expected At Short Courses Power Plant Work Begins In Ten Days Construction is expected to begin within the next 10 days on a major expansion of the A&M Power Plant. Completion is scheduled not later than July 15, 1964. Howard Badcett, College Manager of the Office of Physical Plant, said Tuesday. The expansion is being financed from proceeds of a $2,500 000 revenue bonds sale. The program will more than double the plant’s capacity and increase tbp capacity of the chilling section used to provide air conditioning. The urogram includes remoAring of one of the two more than 900-fopi- smokestacks beside the power plant. BADGETT SAID the expansion program will meet in creased R p eds .resulting from’ Die dormitory expansion and improvements prooram also to be started this month, other new buildings, addi tional research proiects with their often heavy demands for electricity, and improvements on the A&M campus. Notices Issued On Refunds, Reservations The A&M Board of Directors recently awarded A. P. Kasch and Sons of Big Springs a $1,619,900 contract for construction of addit ions to the power plant. The firm has a separate contract for $24,000 to construct a nearby shop and storage building. Earlier the hoard awarded con tracts totaling $746,000 for a 14.000 kilowatt turbine generator which will generate power at 12.470 volts and related equipment including a steam generator and a condenser. The first work by the Kasch firm is expected to be removing an old shop and storage building on the north side of the power plant. The new generator and related equip ment will be located there. The new shop and storage building will be a short distance away, between the College Laundry and Ireland Street. A new wing on the south side of the plant will provide space for five additional one thousand ton chilling units to serve the campus central air conditioning system. Two such units were installed last summer and three more are in cluded in the Kasch conti’act. Badgett said gas company em ployes have begun the job of re locating and enlarging the gas line supplying fuel for the power plant’s steam generators. The Westinghouse Electric Corp. is building the turbine generator unit. The firm has an approxi mately $426,000 contract for the unit which is expected to be de- livei-ed late this year. The power plant, which has a power generation capacity “name plate rated” at 9,750 kilowatts, supplies the College, other members of the A&M system with facilities on the campus and other agencies located on the campus such as the U. S. Department of Agriculture. The Housing Office issued two reminders Tuesday, the first con cerning’ refunds of property and room deposits and the second ex plaining procedures for reserving rooms for the second session of summer school. All dormitory students, includ ing- g-raduating seniors, who do not plan to register for the second summer session or the fall semes ter of 1963 are required to secure a clearance form from their ci vilian counselor. THE FORM is to be processed and turned in to the Housing Of fice with the room key before the student leaves the campus. Mat tress covers are to be turned in to the Department of Stores Ware house during the clearance proce dure. Day students who do not plan to register for either the next sum mer session or the fall term may make application directly to the Fiscal Office for refund of the property deposit. Students whose return in the fall is Questionable at this time wait until September to request a refund of the room deposit, pro vided they have not reserved a room for the fall. The memorandum stressed that students who do reserve rooms for the fall must cancel them by Aug. 15 or the denosit will he forfeited. THE SECOND notice listed two schedules for reservation of rooms for the second summer session; 1. Monday through Wednesday —Students who wish to reserve the room they now occupy and stu dents who bring a room change from the housemaster of the dorm concerned for a room other than the one they now occupy. 2. July 11-13. — All students who have not signed up in accord ance with the above conditions may sign up for rooms on a first come, first served basis. Englishman Will Remember His Visit David Woodcock will remember his visit to the United States— particularly his two-year stay in Texas—for a long time. A Fulbright professor at A&M and a former Manchester (Eng land) resident, Woodcock has taught architecture classes here since September. His experiences —both pleasant and not-so-pleas- ant—are suitable for a book. To begin with, he and his wife, Molly, were greeted shortly be fore their arrival by Hurricane Alma and then by an unseasonal heat wave that plagued the New England area a year ago. “Texas welcomed us in a suit ably English manner with desul tory rain, which looked very pleasant till we left our aircon- ditioned Pullman in Houston,” Woodcock said, rocking his chair back in his “ice-oool” office. The Woodcocks then discovered “to our borrow” the orttside tem perature: 98 degree* with match ing humidity. Our first fortnight in College Station was speat moving from one airconditioned container to another,” he added. The climate is one thing the Englishman will remember. He soon was introduced to America’s freeway traffic and baffling downtown intersections “aptly referred to as spaghetti bowls.” “It’s fantastic,” he sighed, now safely evacuated to College Sta tion. The bespectacled 26-year-old gentloman is the first Fulbright professor the Division of Archi tecture has had. At 24, he was perhaps the youngest to receive a grant under the international teaching program. Woodcock teaches design and city planning courses. His teach ing contract, due to terminate in August, was extended by special permission from Fulbright au thorities. At present he is working on a research proposal on “high rise” school building. Such a study, the professor feels, would solve prob- 1«ms in metropolitan areas whsre land is “highly expensive or sim ply isn’t available” for single- stoi’y structures. “We are happy with his work,” T. R. Holleman, head of the Di vision of Architecture, said, “and we ai’e pleased to know he will teach here another year.” The Woodcocks have made an effort to visit other places in the States, although their traveling has been limited by their parti cipation in campus life. They have seen Houston, Austin, Dallas and Shreveport. Both volunteered to help the Aggie Players, A&M’s dramatics group. Woodcock designs stage settings, and his wife designed and made costumes for major productions last fall. It was this college group, among others, that later assisted the Woodcocks at a critical time. “Shortly after the arrival of their son, Jonathan Alfred, Mrs. Woodcock developed severe head aches. Twelve days later she was rushed to the Texas Medical Cen ter in Houston for major surgery, to remove a brain tumor,” he re calls. “Her recovery was miracu lous,” Woodcock states today. “Although it was a very worry ing time, we were sustained by the help and prayers of many, many friends.” The Aggie Players staged a benefit performance in May for the Woodcocks to help defray medical expenses. Other groups and individuals helped with do nations. “During Molly’s illness,” he said, “we were lent an apartment in Houston, another example of American generosity.” His greatest adjustment has been with the American working hours. Woodcock, a former Manches ter University professor, said his greatest shock came when he learned college classes here begin at 8 and go until 6 p.m. Back Home, he said the dean apologizes for assigning anyone a first period class, which begins at 9:30 a.m. “Such a teacher is looked upon with much pity,” he added, with definite British accent. “I failed to tell my friends back home that summer school classes begin, at 7 a.m. I’m sure they wouldn’t believe me.” He labels football “pretty dull” and terms basketball “f^r more appealing.” He hailed the inau guration of the “A&M Cricket Club” in May as a “great step forward in sports at A&M.” Other English couples are lo cated here, so the Woodcocks are able to exchange copies of “Punch” for English newspapers. Gifts ’from home include “cas kets of tea” and Giles and Andy Capp cartoon books. The Englishman has a distin guished professional record. He has worked for three architec tural firms, in addition to teach ing. His membership list includes numerous groups, including the Royal Institute of British Archi tects. “In spite of the weather,” Woodcock said with agrin, “we are looking forward to another year in Texas.”