The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 15, 1963, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    JU2
Che Battalion
Outdoor Pool
To Get Test..
See Page 7
Volume 60
)on which tli(!
1.
e says the k
nish supplies i
ry for the k
hildren and i
or social resjs
this responsii
: boils down
■e not suppose
ng of value
eavors. Then
the dividin?
aid eliminate t
EA that tht
hool build up
y» thus isei « Key police and civic administrators will be on the A&M |
the proceeds,•ampUs Sunday for the sixth annual Police-Community Rela-
Admissionis j|j ons Institute, which will continue through Thursday,
mtestsinordeiB The conference^ slated to begin at 3 p. m. with registra
program, Mwion, will be attended by 50 dele-*
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1963
Number 128
Police, Civic
Administrators
Meet Monday
to the pronioticBateg interested in better relations
cause not s.. ||>|.tween law enforcement and com-
or themselves,
it for a profit:
is, sports the!
but which hin
' the paying sp
State playedi
['ootball game:
to Auburn
1.
1 Thurs,, Fri.
■ 10. In Bryai
nunity agencies.
One of the keynote speakers will
possibly hSe Noel A. McQuown of the Los
ie no baseball,! ingeles Police Department. He is
leputy chief commander of the
personnel and training bureau.
FOLLOWING registration Sun-
lay, delegates will hear welcome
ddresses by Robert A. Cherry,
distant to the chancellor of A&M,
jnd Gus 0. Krausse, president of
be Texas Police Association and
Irownsville police chief.
E. R. McWilliams of Houston,
egional director of the National
inference of Christians and Jews,
frill speak at 6 p. m. Sunday. He
rill be followed by Wallace D.
The Right T| leasley, coordinator of A&M’s
Kilice training division, who will
liscuss the purpose of the institute.
Beasley said persons interested
d police and civic work are in-
died to hear the talks.
Othei- speakers include:
JOHN B. LYLE, Houston attor-
^ ley, "What the Public Owes the
tolice,” at 1:30 p. m. Monday.
Larry W. Fultz, Houston police
lepartment, “What the Police
)m the Public,” at 2:30 p. m.
^ ionday.
A panel on the “Relationship of
^ 't®( Immuhity Moral Tone to Law Kn-
S weement, at 9 a. m. Tuesday,
’anel members include Edward
ichreiber of Galveston, Howard
i .No. 303
i Cans
en’s
weans"
10
'/rib.,
.... Pkg.
69
.Size^
Hicks of Beaumont, and C. G. Con
ner of Austin.
Edward M. Brown, Abilene
Christian College speech professor,
“The Art of Communicating,” at
2:45 p. m. Tuesday.
Dr. Donald Hayden, University
of Tulsa dean, “The City Confronts
Its Newcomers,” at 9 a. m. Wed
nesday.
DR GEORGE BETO, director of
the Texas Department of Correc
tions, “Rehabilitation,” at 1:30
p. m. Wednesday. Beto will discuss
the subject as it relates to persons
in detention.
Ray W. Williams, administrative
director of the State Board of Par
dons and Paroles, will discuss the
same subject at 2:30 p. m. from the
community viewpoint.
Woodrow Seals of Houston, U. S.
district attorney, “Equal Protection
of the Laws,” 8 a. m. Thursday.
PERRY LUSK of Oklahoma
City, regional director, National
Conference on Christians and Jews,
“Where Do We Go' From Here?”
at 12:30 p. m. Thursday.
The annual institute is sponsored
by the Police Training Division of
Engineering- Extension at A&M in
cooperation with the National Con
ference of Christians and Jews,
Texas Law Enforcement Founda
tion, Texas Department of Public
Safety, Texas Sheriff’s Associa
tion, Texas Police Association and
Texas Education Agency.
hg Teachers Get
Tips On Publicity
Vocational agriculture teachers ting Progressive Farmer magazine,
(J
57
J
29
leed to brush humility aside and
Jo more legitimate bragging about
low their programs mold leaders
Hit of boys and benefit the com-
iiuhity.
The advice came Wednesday
fom a group of newspaper, maga-
line, radio and television newsmen
tfbo spoke to teachers attending
• Workshop in Communications at
tbeir areas as district public re
gions chairmen.
Johnny Watkins, farm director
KWTX-TV in Waco and KBTX-
IV in Bryan, urged the teachers
bi “cackle more about your activi
ties,"
“YOU KNOW WHY you eat
thicken eggs instead of duck
( ggs?” he asked the group. “It’s
because the chicken cackles and
•‘ts you know about it. The duck
W walks away without a sound,
•oo many of you are like ducks.”
What to cackle?
Watkins, who has been conduct
ing a 45-minute program for eight
Jears on two TV channels, said
human interest is always a favor-
he. But it should be “sugar-coated”
>nd entertaining.
To get a story on television, he
Nvised, select a boy or a farmer in
Jour area who is doing something
feally unique. The subject should
*pply to a large area, not just one
locality.
“But I’ll bet not a one of you
lake my advice—because it’s work,”
Catkins said.
GEORGE ROESNER, radio farm
director of Houston’s KPRC, rec
ommended that the teachers get to
. Ww radio and TV farm reporters
[ m their area. Find out the kind of
material they want and don’t want.
Watkins and Roesner agreed that
many good stories lie in an intan
gible realm. The information can
•how how vocational agriculture
builds leadership, not only in agri-
'ulture, but in other phases of life.
I Such stories, they said, demonstrate
' W and why vocational agriculture
lu high schools is indespensible to
8 community.
Bud Fichte of Dallas, repvesen-
listed recommendations for getting
stories into monthly publications.
He said the teachers should un
derstand readers and what they
want; it is the teacher’s responsi
bility to let the magazine know
about a story; the teacher should
establish himself as a reliable news
source; human interest and success
stories are sure-fire attention-get
ters; stories should be adaptable to
a wide area; the article should be
timed for the appropriate farm
season.
A NEWS WRITER for the A&M
Information Office, Doyle Gougler,
said one of the best ways to get
stories into a metropolitan paper is
to work through the local corres
pondent for that paper.
Air Conditioned Dorm Beginning
With these deep gashes in the ground, and to provide air conditioned living quarters
others nearby, workmen have begun con- for more than 2,000 students. School of-
struction of three new dormitories slated ficials hope the dorms will be ready in 1964.
OJVE OVERALL EVENT
1st Texas 4-H Horse Show,
Annual Short Course Slated
A&M will hold its first aqnual
State 4-H Horse Show and third
annual Horse Short Course rolled
intp one overall event Aug. 22-24.
The show is set Aug. 22-23, and
the short course for Aug. 23-24.
Duane Kraemer, A&M animal
husbandry instructor and general
program chairman, said a special
show feature will be a trophy
to the horse accumulating the most
points in performance and halter
classes.
Another attraction will be a tro
phy to the champion showman. The
boy or girl selected as best show
man of each halter class will be
brought back to the arena and
judged for the special award.
KRAEMER SAID a banner will
go to the county team winning- the
most points. Three county awards
will be made. Counties are assign
ed a class (A, AA, or AAA), based
on number of entries.
Halter class judging starts at
9 a.m. Aug. 22. Western pleasure
is at 8 p.m. and reining at 9 n.m.
Flag racing, pole binding, bar
rel racing and keyhole racing
events start at 8 a.m. Aug. 23
and will run through 11 a.m.
THE HORSE SHORT course will
start at 1:45 p.m., with authorities
to discuss subjects of interest to
most horsemen, novice or profes
sional. The course is open u> the
public and will cost $5 for adults
and $2 for each youth of high
school age or under.
Housing Office Issues Notices
On Refunds, Fall Reservations
The Housing Office Wednesday
issued notices on the claiming of
refunds for property and room
deposits and room reservations for
the fall semestei-.
All dormitory students, includ
ing graduating seniors, who do
not plan to register for the fall
semester must get a clearance
from their Civilian Counselor in
order to expedite refunds on room
and property deposits.
This form is to be processed and
turned in to the Housing Office
before the student leaves the
campus. Mattress covers are to
be turned in to the Department of
Stores Warehouse.
DAY STUDENTS who do not
plan to register for the fall
semester may make application
directly to the Fiscal Office for
refund of the property deposit.
Students who will live in cadet
dorms or students who have not
yet reserved civilian rooms should
report to the Housing Office be
tween Monday at 8 a.m. and 5
p.m., Aug. 23, to reserve rooms.
Civilian students who signed for
rooms in the spring should make
certain their reservation cards
have been received by the Housing
Office.
Those who have a $20 room de
posit on file will not have to pay
any additional fees to
rooms. Others will have to pay
the fee. Students who sign up for
Kraemer said some of the topics
expected to draw wide attention
include research needs, taming and
training young horses, and dis
ease prevention and first aid.
Here is a list of subjects and
speakers the first day in the Mem
orial Student Center:
“Economic in the Horse Indus
try” by Milo Sullivan of Richard
son, horse sales manager; “De
velopment of the Breeds,” W. M.
Warren, Animal Science Depart
ment head, Auburn University;
“Reproduction in Horses,” A. M.
Sorensen, A&M animal husbandry
department; “Breeding Problems,”
Dr. W. M. Romane, A&M veteri
nary medicine school; “Research
Needs and Development,” Wayne
Soil Sciences
Head Resigns
For New Job
Dr. William O. Trogdon, head
of the Department of Soil and
Crop Sciences, has resigned effec
tive Sept. 1, Dr. R. E. Patterson,
A&M dean of agriculture, an
nounced.
The veteran agronomist will join
Best Fertilizer Company as execu
tive vice president of the firm’s
West Texas Division. He will live
in Plainview.
Trogdon came to A&M in 1958
to head the Department of Agron
omy, which has since been re
organized and consolidated with
floriculture and horticulture and
renamed the Department of Soil
and Crop Sciences.
“Di\ Trogdon has served with
distinction in this department,”
Dean Patterson said. “His state
wide leadership will be greatly
missed.
O. Kester, DVM, Marek Morris
Animal Research Foundation, Den
ver, Colo.; “Infectious Anemia,”
Dr. M. F. Young, and “Parasite
Control,” Dr. R. D. Turk, both of
the A&M veterinary medicine
school.
A question gnd answer session
will be held that evening at 7:30.
On Aug. 24, starting at 8 a.m.
at the Horse Center, Sorensen and
Kraemer will conduct demonstra
tions on semen collection, semen
storage, artificial insemination, na
tural service and foal care.
ALSO STARTING that morning
at the same time will be a manage
ment session from 8 to 10 a.m.
in the Animal Husbandry Pavilion
and narrated by Bob Gray, editor
of “The Texas Horseman” maga
zine.
“Fitting Horses for Show and
Sale” will be discussed by George
Tyler of Gainsville. L. N. Sikes of
Sherman will talk on “Taming and
Training Young Horses.”
Out at the veterinary school
auditorium, starting at 10:03 a.m.,
Romane will outline “Disease Pre
vention and First Aid for Horses.”
Dr. R. S. Titus, A&M School of
Veterinary Medicine, will outline
“Convalescent Handling of Horses.”
That afternoon, Sikes and Tylef
will conduct demonstrations on
western pleasure riding, reining,
barrel racing, roping and cutting.
New Vending
Machines Will
Be Installed
A Bryan firm will place a complete vending machine
service into operation on the campus under terms of a new
contract.
Signing of the contract with Coca Cola Bottling Co. was
announced Wednesday by Tom D. Cherry, A&M director of
business affairs. The firm’s present contract expires Aug.
31 and the new contract provides for the increased service.
The new contract calls for the installation in dormitories
and other major buildings on campus of a total of 99 new
machines, plus the renovation of 32 machines the company
now has on campus.
The vending machines to be placed in service on the A&M
campus will represent an in-*^
vestment in excess of $150,-
000, E. B. (Chic) Sale of the
bottling company said.
“We are highly pleased to
have the services of a local business
concern whose services have been
highly satisfactory in the past,”
Cherry said.
He described the contract as
providing for “a first class vend
ing operation ranking with the best
on other campuses and in in
dustrial plants.”
Depending on requirements there
will be varying numbers of soft
drinks, coffee, candy, gum s and
cookies, milk and ice cream ma
chines located in various buildings
on the A&M campus.
CHERRY EMPHASIZED that
locations of the various machines
still are tentative but plans call
for each dormitory or lounge to
have both the soft drink and the
candy, gum and cookies machines.
There also will be milk and ice
cream machines in the lounges of
Dormitories 5, 6, 9 and 10 and
Puryear Hall. Ice cream machines
will be spotted in the lounges of
Dormitories 14 and 15.
A bank of five of the new ma
chines will be installed in several
classroom buildings. Other build
ings will have two or three ma
chines.
A survey was made of vending
operations on 15 other college and
university campuses in the South
west as part of an A&M study,
CheiTy said.
Plans call for 34 Four Flavor
Ice Maker Drink Machines to be
located across the campus and at
the Research and Development
Annex.
“This is the most expensive ma
chine ' the vendors have,” Cherry
said.
THE CONTRACT call for a
minimum of 32 of the present pre
mix single and double flavor ma
chines to be renovated completely.
All of the present machines which
vend drinks in bottles will be re
moved.
The premix machines will be
modified to use large-nine instead
of seven-ounce-cups, and' the price
for a softdrink will be increased
from five to 10 cents.
Band Will Attend LSU, Tech
Football Games This Season
The Aggie Band will travel north
ter Lubbock and south to Baton
Rouge, La. this fall for A&M
road games with Texas Tech and
LSU.
Band director, Lt. Col. E. V.
He will continue to serve i Adams, said final approval for the
Texas agriculture in his new posi- j hips came Monday,
reserve ^ tion, and we look forward to con- | Special trains have been con-
, tinued close association with him I tracted with the Missouri Pacific
! in the future.” I an d Sante Fe Railroads to move
fall but do not register will forfeit
the $20 deposit.
ALL STUDENTS with their be-
Dean Patterson described Trog- j h* 6 243 men and a baggage car
don as one of outstanding soil i load of instntments.
longings must be moved into new
rooms by 7 p.m., Aug. 23. Dorms
now closed will be unlocked from
1 p.m. to 7 p.m., Aug. 22 and 23,
for moving. To protect student
property, all dorms except Ramps
C and D of Hart and Milner Hall
will be locked at 7 p.m., Aug. 23.
Students who wish to remain on
campus between* terms may regis
ter for C and D Ramps of Hart
Hall or Milner Hall for this period
by paying $15 rent at the Fiscal
Ofifce and presenting the receipt
at the Housing Office. This regis
tration must be completed by 5
p.m., Aug. 23.
as one
scientists and administrators in the
southwestern region.
Trogdon is a native of South
west Oklahoma. He received his
BS degree at Oklahoma State Uni
versity in 1942 and his doctorates
at Ohio State University in 1949.
The scientist was with the Texas
Agricultural Experiment Station
at Temple from 1948 to 1949 be
fore going to Midwestern Uni
versity at Wichita Falls as chair
man of the Agriculture Depart
ment and director of the Soil Test
ing Laboratory. He joined Olin
Mathieson Chemical Corporation in
1953 as agronomist in Houston. He
remained there until coming to
A&M.
THE LSU TRIP is sponsored
by the Aggie Club, a booster or
ganization for Aggie athletic pro
grams, and the Tech trip by the
Athletic Department.
ly on Sept. 21, day of the game.
The Tech train will leave Cald
well on the morning of Oct. 5
and arrive in Lubbock that after
noon for the night contest. The
band will return to College Station
immediately after each game.
While in Baton Rouge, the
bandsmen will be the guests of
that city’s Former Aggie Student
club for breakfast and dinner. In
Lubbock, the West Texas Aggie
Club has planned a barbecue for
the band members.
BOTH EXPERIENCED and
freshmen bandmen will return to
the campus Sept. 9, one week be
fore registration, to begin work
DEAN FRED J. BENSON
. . . back from polar trip
Dean Benson
Returns Today
From Arctic
Dr. Fred J. Benson, dean of
engineering and director of the
Texas Engineering Experiment
Station, returns Thursday from a
12-day, 13,000 mile Air Force in
spection tour on top of the world.
Dubbed Operation Cool School
by the Air Force, the ti’ip gives
educators a chance to leave their
roles as teachers and assume roles
of students in the polar environ
ment. The program is an out
growth of a routine inspection tour
made annually by the Director of
Air Force Civil Engineering.
BENSON AND four other prom
inent educators made the polar
circuit at the invitation of Maj.
Gen. Cecil E. Combs, commandant
of the Air Force Institute of Tech
nology, and Brig. Gen; Robert H.
Curtin, newly-appointed director of
Air Force Civil Engineexang.
The men departed Andrews AFB,
Md., Aug. 4.
Cool School gave Dean Benson
a chance to study engineering,
maintenance and construction ac
tivities at such air base's as Thule
and Sondrestr'om in Gi’eenland and
Elmendorf and Eielson in Alaska.
Benson and the others saw the
Ballistic Missile Eaxiy Warning
System (BMEWS), the Distant
Early Warning System (DEW
Line), and the Dye Stations on
the Gi'eenland ice cap.
The men also visited Goose Bay
Air Base, Laboxador, the Alaskan
bases of Point Bax-row, King Sal
mon, Spari-evohn and Shemya, and
concluded the trip with a tour of
the operational missile facilities at
Malmstrom AFB, Mont.
THIS WAS the sixth such Cool
School program. So far 29 edu
cators from different schools
across the counti-y have viewed
scientific, engineering and mili-
taxy activities in the Arctic.
Athletic director and head foot- | on the out-of-town drills. Colonel
ball coach, Hank Foldberg, said | Adams said meals and lodging will
the band was an important part of j be furnished to bandsmen without
the program at athletic events, cost during the px-e-school px*actice.
“The band is also a good repi’e- The band trips this fall will be
sentative of other phases of A&M the first to Louisiana and Lubbock
which make up the complete uni
versity stnxcture,” the coach com
mented.
Both out-of-town trips are
scheduled on Saturdays so band-
men will not miss classes. The
LSU train will leave Houston Sept.
in the same yeai\ In 1960 the
band accompanied the team to the
LSU contest and the following year
to Lubbock.
The longest trip made by he
band was to Los Angeles, Calif, in
1955 to back the team when it
20, and axtive in Baton Rouge ear- | met UCLA.
Computer Lecture
For Ag Work Set
The application of digital com
puters to agricultural problems
will be outlined in a National Sci
ence Foundation Seminar sche
duled at 2 p.m. Friday.
Dr. K. R. Tefertiller, an asso
ciate professor of agricultural
economics, will give the lecture in
Room 229 of the Chemistry
Building.
“Linear Programming Applied
to Agricultural Problems” is Te-
fertiller’s announced topic.
Interested members of the
staff, student body and public
are invited to attend.