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Shirt Sleeve Opera Called 6 Terrific
9
‘Terrific — really terrific”
was the comment most often
heard as crowds departed Guion
Hall Sunday, Monday and Tues
day nights. They had just wit
nessed performances of “South
Pacific” put on by local resi
dents, musicians and actors.
The production was this year’s
“Shirt Sleeve Opera” sponsored
by the Memorial Student Center
Summer Directorate. “South
Pacific” was directed by Mrs.
Billy Jean Barron and Bob
Boone.
High on the directors’ list of
compliments were those going to
Charles Hearn, fifth year archi-
tecure student who was responsi
ble for the sets. Hearn, Dave
Woodard, Jeff Brainerd and
others backstage were cited for
their dexterity in making fast
changes of scenery.
Ann Harrison of Bryan, who
played the leading role of nurse
Nellie Forbush, was praised for
her “warm and sincere” portray
al. A statement from Boone add
ed, “Her singing and dancing,
aided by her very mobile and
lovely face, were of professional
calibre in every way.”
The French planter, Emile de
Becque, was played by Bryan’s
Charles Mitchell. “His resonant
voice along with a beautifully
prepared French accent made de
Becque quite believable,” the
statement said.
Luther Billis, the sailor with
a deal and a liker of “projects”
was played by William Andrew
Jr. of Bryan; Boone said An
drew gave Billis a very effec
tive and constant characteriza
tion.
The highlight of the show came
when Mrs. Harrison and Andrew
combined to do an eye-filling
rendition of “Honeybun.”
Boone said the special credit
should be given to Mrs. Angie
Harrison of Bryan, costumer for
the show. He described all the
costuming as “colorful and x - eal-
istic.
Barbara Carson of Bryan por
trayed Bloody Mary, a Tonkau-
nese vendor who could always
outdo Billis. Boone praised her
control to voice and singing of
“Bali Hai.” Mrs. Carson’s make
up took 45 minutes to apply.
The second love story involved
Lt. Cable, played by Bill Dans-
by and Liat, portrayed by La-
I Vada Barbee. Boone praised
Dansby and described Mrs. Bar
bee as a “lovely and diminutive
Liat.”
Boone emphasized that those
with smaller parts made them
real and important to the overall
show. “Heading this list,” he
said, “should be Harry Gooding
of College Station, who played
Capt. Brackett.” With Gooding
during much of the production
was John Montgomery of Bryan,
who played Commander Harbi-
son.
Other supporting players men
tioned by Boone were Ron Man-
lone, Tommy Taylor, Bill Mat
thews, Ken Fisher, Alex Quisen-
berry, Bob Medlin, George Bam
berg, Herb Moeller, Henry Van-
der Crpyssen, Elaine Meinecke,
Joe Piermattei,
Sally Wynn, Carla Vaughn,
Jeannie Smith, Fanell Edwin,
Janet Gould, Mary Margaret
Gibbs, Judy Mills, Marcia Chalk,
Suzanne Medlin, David Reisinger,
Bill Semmelrogge, and Dana
Wortham.
Boone, the MSC music coordi
nator, directed the orchestra. He
pointed out that all musicians,
as well as the actors, donated
their time for the production.
Members of the orchestra were
Margaret Adams, Mary Leland,
John Holick, Bob Alexander, Ste-
wai’t Jernigan, Mary Margaret
Hierth, John Williamson,
Willard Johnson, Micky Ste
vens, Sonny BroWri, Jack Briggs,
George Stuart, John Upchurch,
Furman Isbel, Fern Hamman,
Louvenia Bateson, Roy Allison,
Lewis King, and Melanie Clark.
Betty Moore directed the danc
ing chorus, which Boone said
“gave the show a brightness and
spirit typical of Broadway mus
icals.” Dancers were Margaret
Brown, Mary Beth Calhoun, Ruth
Ellen Calhoun, Donna Dale, Chris
Gooding, Linda Isbel, Clapzelle
Poe, Angie Harrison and Suzanne
Medlin.
Che Battalion
Volume 60
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1963
Number 123
Ready For Remodeling
Vacated only a short time ago by design students in archi
tecture, this is one of the fourth-floor rooms of the Aca
demic Building to get a “new dress.”
Fourth Floor
Of Ac Building
Being Readied
The fourth floor of the Academic Building on the A&M
campus is getting a ‘‘new dress” for an old role this fall—
bousing classes and faculty.
The Division of Architecture has moved from the top
loor of the domed, 50-year-old*
Wding to occupy the new Archi
tecture Building. For the first time
iince early 1914 student architects
>re not meeting classes in the Aca-
fenic Building.
The floor with approximately
000 square feet of floor suace
^ being readied to house other
students and faculty members.
The B-W Construction Co. of
hyan is renovating the floor with
the $60,047 contract calling for
tompletion by Sept. 1.
THE NEW classrooms will be
Signed from the registrar’s office
hke other general purpose class-
tooms, Dean of Instruction William
Graff said.
“We expect that the people who
ar e housed in the Academic Build-
arranged.
Plans call for 32 offices on the
floor. There also will be seven
classrooms or laboratories.
THE ACADEMIC building occu
pies the site of the “Old Main,”
which burned in 1912. Construction
began almost immediately on the
new building and it was occupied in
1914. The cost was $225,000.
Modernization of the building’s
interior continued through the
years and only the fourth floor has
been renovated extensively in re
cent years.
The building measures approxi
mately 260 by 75-feet and was the
first erected on the A&M campus
with a structural frame of rein-
School Law Workshop Given
Close Attention By Students
the Departments of Education j force <* concrete, College Archivist
told Psychology, English, Mathe- Ernest Langford said. He is a pro
xies and Modern Languages, will lessor emeritus of architecture.
I" 6 those who will need these class-
Nis the most,” the dean said.
The department office for edu
ction and psychology will be
r ov ed into new quarters on the
fourth floor. This department and
Wish will have nine offices each
to'd mathematics will utilize 14
5 Vices on the floor.
The Academic Building elevator
Jo will be modernized under a
â„¢i.000 contract awarded Westing-
Electric Corporation’s Ele
ctor Division of Dallas, Howard
Jdtrett, college manager of the
office of Physical Plant, said.
^flE CONTRACTOR requires
Wroximately six months to secure
P® machinery and parts. Actual
building of the elevator will be
'O’topleted within eight or 10 weeks
work begins.
Padgett said the new elevator
have the latest automatic se-
*^*Ve controls and other features.
Contracts for both projects were
a rded at the June meeting of the
Board of Directors.
The work on the fourth floor in-
totoucs rearranging the space which
^consisted mostly of large draft-
rooms. Partitions, lighting and
*** conditioning ducts must be re-
Fireman’s School To Offer
Something For Everybody
A&M’s 34th Firemen’s Training
School will offer something for
everybody — rookies and veterans.
Even the public will watch dem
onstrations with latest fire fighting
g - ear on two nig-hts of the school,
Henry D. Smith, chief of the En-
5th Journalism
Workshop Will
Begin Monday
Two newspaper executives and
an industrial publications editor
are among the speakers announced
for the fifth annua] Hig-h School
Journalism Workshop at A&M
next week.
More than 300 high school jour
nalism students have registered for
the five-day meeting, Delbert Mc
Guire, head of the Department of
Journalism here and workshop di-‘
rector, reported. He expects the
number to reach 350 before the
conference begins.
Among the speakers will be
Thomas C. Turner of Waco, Dal
las Morning News Central Texas
News Bureau chief; John H. John
son Jr., of Houston, Trunkline Gas
Company publications editor, and
Robert W. Akers, Beaumont Enter
prise-Journal editor and chief.
They are among 30 persons from
industry, Texas high schools, and
colleges named speakers and ad
visers for the workshop. Taylor
Publishing Company of Dallas will
send four representatives to work
with the students.
In addition to the talks, the stu
dents will edit a daily mimeograph
newspaper, a 64-page yearbook
with color and a letterpress news
paper during the workshop.
Assisting - with publication •wall
be Miss Ernestine Farr of Arling
ton and Mrs: Lela Edwards of
Bryan, both .newspaper advisers,
and Mrs. Betty Stanley of Lubbock,
yearbook director. Doyle Keeling
of Odessa will be in charge of
photography.
Twenty-eight students, mostly
schoolmen, are giving close atten
tion to an A&M workshop course in
school law. They must.
The three - week concentrated
workshop requires the same work
as a longer course.
The workshops—first of their
type held on the A&M campus—are
planned especially for school ad
ministrators who cannot be away
from their posts longer than thi - ee
weeks.
“The response has surpassed our
expectations for a first offering,”
Dr. Paul R. Hensarling, head of the
Department of Education and Psy
chology said.
Each of the workshops has at
tracted 30 students, schoolmen plus
some A&M graduate students in
education.
Teaching the current workshop,
second of the three, is Dr. Dwight
L. Kirk, superintendent of schools,
Odessa, and a prominent Texas ed
ucator. Kirk’s major field of study
is educational administration.
“I like this workshop, I think
most of all, because it concentrates
a person’s attention on the subject
in a continuous program,” he said
“the fact that school superinten
dents and other administrators are
in the class lends a practical appli
cation.”
“The graduate students gain
greater appreciation for problems
faced by the schoolmen,” Hensar
ling said.
The current workshop ends Fri
day. Class members meet all after
noon Monday through Friday. Li
brary work and other preparation
keeps them busy at other hours.
Dr. Emmitt Smith of West Texas
State taught the first workshop,
June 3 through 21. The session
was devoted to supervision and was
designed to help supervisors and
principals of schools.
gineering Extension Service fire
men training program, announced.
More than 1,700 persons engaged
in fire prevention, control and
safety will attend the July 21-26
training program, Smith added.
OLD TIMERS as well as novice
volunteers will get training in driv
ing emergency vehicles, fire fight
ing - , rescue, pumping operations,
forcible entry and other problems
confronting firemen.
The fire fighters will learn about
chemicals, liquid oxygen and hy-
drog - en, multi-story rescues with or
without stretchers and 1 ultra-mod
em equipment.
Fire marshals will hear talks
ranging from recently adopted
laws and laws of arson to inspec
tion practices and courtroom pro
cedures. Some firemen will be
come teachers.
Of the record 1,700 anticipated
enrollment, 290 will be veteran
firemen and manufacturers who
will serve as instructors. One of
the teachers will be Palmer West
of Eldorado, president of Texas
Firemen’s and Fire Marshal’s As
sociation.
“AGAIN THIS YEAR, industry
will loan more than $200,000 worth
of equipment to the campus for
our use,” Smith added. “The school
will use 70,000 gallons of petro
leum in fire fighting courses.”
Health Physics
Fellowships
To Be Offered
A&M has been designated one of
the few universities where Atomic
Energy Commission Special Fellow
ships in Health Physics may be
held.
Health Physics is a growing pro
fession concerned with the study,
evaluation and control of radiation
hazards.
Graduate Dean Wayne C. Hall
Wednesday announced approval of
the fellowship program with the
AEC. He said it is anticipated the
program will be in full operation
here in September of next year.
Ultimately the program may in
volve a number of students here.
“The program is to train people
badly needed in health physics,”
Dean Hall said. “Texas A&M’s en
trance into this program is espec
ially significant in view of the
AEC’s decision to turn over to the
states the responsibility of policing
the use of radioactivg materials,”
he continued.
Only eight other universities, by
latest count, cooperate in the pro
gram. The nearest are Vanderbilt
University and the University of
Kansas. The University of Puerto
Rico is the only land-grant school
listed.
Dean Hall said the health physics
fellowship holders will study here
for two semesters and then have
a practical assignment for the sum
mer. Assignments are at major
facilities such as Oak Ridge Na
tional Laboratory.
Completion of the academic study
and the summer assignment will
qualify the student for a certificate
in health physics. Studies are in
mathematics, nuclear engineering,
radiation biology and physics.
The public demonstrations on
Wednesday and Thursday nights
will feature:
1. Portable foam maker, capa
ble of producing 5,000 cubic feet
of chemical foam per minute.
2. A special saw, capable of cut
ting - through a brick wall or easily
removing doors from automobiles.
3. The strength of liquid oxy
gen.
4. New fire resistant plastic
that will withstand heat from a
butane torch.
5. Underwater rescue techniques.
6. Chemicals that disperse flam-
able materials.
3 MORE FELLOW
Plan Approved
For Promotion
Opportunities
A program to encourage and facilitate interdepartmental
promotions for classified college employees has been approved
by A&M’s Academic Council Executive Committee.
C. C. Munroe Director of Personnel at A&Ms said the new
program, to be started Aug. 1, will expand opportunities for
all employees and should increase levels of experience in
high-rated classifications. The plan at first will be confined
to positions on-campus.
Basic to workable program by interdepartmental promo
tion is compus-wide advertisement of all position vacancies,
the director said.
“The medium to be used for this .advertisement is a ‘Job
"^Opportunities Bulletin’ which
will be issued periodically by
NSF High School
Course Nears End
As it draws near its close at the
end of this week, the fourth annual
A&M physics program for selected
high school students has been de
scribed as a success by both stu
dents and adult supervisors.
The A&M program is one of
many similar sessions now in prog
ress at colleges across the nation.
Sponsored by the National Science
Foundation, the courses deal with
all the major fields of sciences.
OTHERS WILL begin later in
the summer. A&M is to have three
more—in geology, mathematics and
biology—during the next summer
session.
Directing this summer’s physics
program was Dr. Dayle O. Sittler,
assistant professor of physics. The
32 students, including one girl,
came mostly from Texas. Five were
from out of state.
“I don’t know if they’re having
fun,” said Sittler, “but I sure am.”
He said the six-week program
was designed mainly to “preserve”
promising high school students who
might be induced to take up careers
in physical sciences.
THE COURSE, he explained, is
primarily an introduction to the
many aspects of physics—so the
students would be exposed to posi-
bilities they ordinarily would miss
until entering college.
The students, most of them high
school juniors who have not had
physics yet, were selected by Sit
tler. Part of the application pro
cedure involved a battery of tests.
Sittler said the programs differ
widely from school to school.
The A&M group hears a lecture
by Sittler daily at 7 a.m. A labora
tory is held from 8:30 to 10:30.
The students hear a second lecture
by Ronald E. Smith at 11.
ACCORDING TO SITTLER, the
coursework deals mainly with the
main divisions of physics. He said
his own sessions covei’s “classical”
physics, primarily heat and me-
modern aspects of the science.
In the afternoons the students
are “farmed out” as assistants on
Aggie Exes
Receive First
Place Award
A&M’s Former Students Associa
tion received a first place award
last week in Atlantic City, N.. J.,
by the American Alumni Council
“for outstanding service rendered
its alma mater and the cause of
education.”
The Aggies shared the coveted various research projects over the
alumni service award with the Uni- campus. A few work in the Depart-
versity of Alabama, whose former I ment of Physics while others are
students were cited for “respon- j working in such places as wildlife
sible stewardship” during the inte- management, nuclear science, agri-
gration crisis. cultural engineering, biochemistry,
The award was one of two given i electrical engineering and veteri-
ithe Aggies. The other was a $150 | nary medicine.
honorable mention prize for “out- | Week nights are consumed by
standing sustained performance in “homework” problems and prepara-
alumni support.” | tion of “term papers.” Sittler said
Both citations were presented at the students were allowed to choose
the AAC’s 50th anniversary con- ; a topic from a list prepared by him
ference. Attending the national | and were expected to use the li-
meeting are J. B. (Dick) Hervey, brary in compiling a report,
former student secretary; Richard j The students are given a quiz
Weirus, alumni development fund ; each Saturday morning,
director, and E. E. McQuillen, Col- j Don Reddick( dormitory coun-
lege development fund director. | selor for the boys living in Hart
Specifically, the AAC mentioned | Hall, said the students participate
A&M’s Century Study, which pro- | in a variety of weekend activity,
jected the needs of the college over Dances, swimming parties and simi-
a 15-year period. The Aggies con- j lar recreation have provided wel-
tributed more than $50,000 to fi- ! come breaks in the accelerated pro-
nance the project. I gram.
the College Personnel Office,’
Munroe explained. “This bul
letin will list all classified
vacancies by title, indicate the pay
range, and give a brief description
of requirements. Each vacancy
will also be given a code number.”
HE EMPHASIZES the following
three requirements for interdepart
mental promotion applicants:
1. The position for which appli
cation is made must carry a high
er classification than the em
ployee’s present position.
2. Regular budget employees
should have been on their present
jobs for at least six months. An
hourly employee may apply i - egard-
less of length of service.
3. Unless otherwise specified,
applications will be accepted only
from persons who will be resident
in the area for at least two years.
Other requirements are these:
Applications must be submitted on
the standai'd “Application for Em
ployment” form available from the
College Personnel Office. Appli
cations will be accepted from pres
ent employees only for specific va
cancies as advertised in the Job
Opportunities Bulletin.
Each application must have at
tached to it a letter of concurrence
or recommendation from the em
ployee’s current supervisor. These
can be sent direct from the depart
ment to the College Personnel Of
fice.
Munroe said the bases for selec
tion are the following:
1. Applicants will be considered
according to their qualifications
chanics. Smith discusses the more for the advertised position and
their record of past, performance,
including attendance.
2. Other factors being equal,
preference for all vacancies will be
given to college employees.
3. The responsibility for final
selection of applicants rests with
the department in which the va
cancy exists.
Calhoun Receives
Engineering Award
For Leadership
Dr. John C. Calhoun, Jr., vice
chancellor for development of the
A&M College System who is now
on leave to serve as science ad
visor to the Secretary of the In
terior, has received the 1963 Char
les W. Crawford Award.
Dean Fred J. Benson of the
School of Enginering announced
the presentation of the award for
distinguished service to the School
of Engineexnng.