Cbe Battalion Texas A&M University Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1964 Number 64 Thief Takes Kennedy Halfs, Stamps, Clock Twenty-five dollars in Kennedy ilfs, approximately eight dollars i five cent stamps and an electric lock were taken from the main [fice of the Department of Journ- lism Friday night or early Sat- rday morning. The burglar entered the journal- sm office in the basement of lagle Hall by breaking an office [Mow, Glenn Bolton, campus rarity officer said. Bolton gave otry time between 11 p.m. and 3 .m., based on the lack of foot- rints from the rainstorm. Dr. John C. Merrill, acting head f the department, discovered the reak in at 10 a.m. He noticed lie office door open earlier but not investigate as everything ppeared in order. At 10, he was itting mail in the office and rand the desk front removed. Mrs. Flippo said the thief had roken the desk front off in an Sort to get inside the desk. After aining entry to the desk, he went bugh the keys. The strong box containing the ranedy half dollars was located » file cabinet. The thief un- ocked the file cabinet and strong K > took the money and put the tong box in the cabinet and the ty back in the desk, Mrs. Flippo laii Mrs. Flippo said the student Iks had also been knocked down, ■t nothing seemed missing. After finishing in the file cabi- d and returning the key to the tong box to the desk, the thief Ktad the file cabinet and took the y Officers said he unlocked ^ office door and left by a build- exist, the door was ajar Satur- V morning when Merrill arrived. Mrs. Flippo said the door to “ice number 10 was open but ""gs apparently undisturbed. Of- w 10 is unoccupied at the pre- mt time. Jb Kennedy half dollars were IIZe mone y from the High School •urnalism Workshop for a con- to sponsored by J. E. Loupot, |°rth Gate merchant. The money * s returned to Loupot since 11 es f°rbid prize money being warded. A full and partial roll of five tnt stamps valued at eight dollars ere also taken from the desk 0n ? a n electric clock on the cabinet belonging to Mrs. ■■ppo. Mrs. Flippo said she had taken m cash and checks from ' toography sales to the Fiscal lce Friday morning. Dormitor y Delay Announced; Commandant Reassigns Rooms hpi . \ i Contractor Rushes To Complete Work Only two of the newly constructed air conditioned dorm itories originally slated to be completed by Sept. 1 will open to students at registration, announced Bennie A. Zinn, Di rector of Student Affairs. Dorms 19 and 22 will be open on schedule and will ac comodate 352 students. Dorms 17, 18, 20, and 21 will be opened for occupancy by Sept. 5. At present all students that have signed up for the concerned dorms, other than 19, 22, 17, 18, 20 and 21, will be accomodated in Mitchell, Milner, 12, 1, 9, and 3. Athletes normally assigned to 15 will be accomodated in Mitchell. Cadets assigned to 14 and 16 will be accomodated in Milner, NEW AIR CONDITIONED DORMS only dorms 19 and 22 will open on schedule 12, 1, 9 and 3. At present accommodation plans call for some triple stacking in 12, 1, and 3. “Students will be moved to dorms 14, 15, 16 as they become available,” said Zinn. “The housing and Commandant’s offices and all concerned depart ments are doing their best to re accommodate students as speedily as possible,” added Zinn. The construction delay appar ently stems from temporary short age of hardware and furnishings as a result of holdups from the suppliers. Although all major con struction is completed on all of the new dorms, articles of furniture are still to be moved in, and in some areas interior decoration is still incomplete. Engineers Set Short Course Electrical engineers representing three states are expected for a five-day short course starting Mon day on the A&M University campus. The engineers will study the theory of symmetrical com ponents, a mathematical method of analyzing electrical circuit con ditions. Professor Lewis ML Haupt Jr. teaches the course offered for the tenth year. Enrollment is limited. Twelve engineers from Missis sippi, Oklahoma and Texas are registered for the Aug. 31-Sept. 4 Albert Creech ^pointed To ' (irnpus Post Creech, a veteran of *en earS of for eign service, has Ifam/f ° lnted Coordinator of Pro- ice ofT f0 !' A&M University’s Of- ack [j n erna tional Programs, Dr. oday ray ’ c ^ rec t°r, announced ''Th re P laces William S. Swin- iept, i ° as re signed effective ° d ° £ ra 4uate study at ilan trairr eW P° s *Uon, Creech will !i en vk;+ ngr pro & ra ms for all for- L itors to the A&M Univer- including some 300 annually for informal '1 [h . .^sit 'Siting. *ch 20 °thers who come Si„ ? ar for formal academic He will also counsel l Bryan Conducts Spraying, Fogging The following is a letter from the acting director and city health officer of Bryan, C. M. Cole, M.D., concerning the threat of encephalitis in the Bryan-College Station area.—Ed. Due to the encephalitis epidemic in Houston and the publicity given, many local citizens are calling the City Health Officer, the Health Department and Sanitation De partment, regarding spraying and fogging for mosquitoes. Regular spraying and fogging has been carried on all summer and has been increased after the recent rains. Fog ging can only be done from streets, and too, many times the breeding place is in back yards or under houses where the fog will not drift or settle. Each house holder should check his own property and eliminate the standing water if he wants to eliminate the mosquito. The most common source of standing water are containers under the eaves of houses and garages which hold the water. Old tires hold water and offers shade the mosquito wants. Also, driveway culverts are common breed ing places, especially when grass has grown at each end of the culvert to hold water inside the pipe. Another common place for the “wiggle tail” to hatch is where evaporative fans leak water or condensation from air conditioners cause pooling. In another month or two air conditioning towers will be an excellent place or mosquitoes to lay their eggs. Low places holding water m yards can and should be filled or drained. If it cannot be filled soon, a light oil such as diesel or kerosene will kill the wiggler. Just because a mosquito bites you does not mean you will have encephalitis. The mosquito must be the Culex. It is only the female that can bite. It must first bite a sick host several days before it bites you. The most com mon host is a fowl, but may be a number of other animals, even snakes. C. M. Cole, M. D. Acting Director and City Health Officer City of Bryan Delegates Slate 14th Annual Industrial Research Meet F ou hg Republicans Set Goals 0r 1964-65 School Year Cblic 9 ® 4 :? TeXas A&M Young thev umT 6 Set £° a l s f° r ,Cl1001 year 1 stri ve during the ^tical Ph 86 “Aggie for thev Ucatzon ” the officers httbers y WlU strive for 1,000 < ! ?ani 2atin« nStrUCt dorm itory level ^ an Office K Set Up a ren tal order uddin g a t North Gate J**l>lish * ract new members, , d buti on r j ence ’ and provide during. fk nd ° rganiza tional cen- 0t her i • , Cam P a ign. ^ on- Ca j!^ tlVes set by the club ^ ^de deb^ 8 reco ^ nit ion, cam- L ats - ProviH S With Youn e Dem - SW j^^PPortunity to hear r b Ucan o J ° Wer and h elp elect Officer, f andlda tes. °r 1964-65 are Everett Lindstrom, club chairman; Mike Hooper, area chairman; Bill Gies- enschlag, vice-chairman; Joe Edel- brock, secretary, and Bill Smith, treasurer. Doctoral Grant Joseph Roland Troxler of Col lege Station, a Ph.D. student at A&M University, has been awarded a $3,270 grant from the Shell Oil Companies Foundation. A mechanical engineering major and a former Louisiana resident, Troxler has completed a year’s study toward the doctorate. Shell also awarded a $1,000 grant to the mechanical engineer ing department to help finance special research projects. Cashier Retires After 40 Years Of A&M Service Cliff Edge, cashier in the Fiscal Department, will retire from the activities of A&M University Monday, after 44 years of service. Open house for his friends will be held this afternoon from 1:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. in the Faculty Room (second floor) of the Rich ard Coke Building, honoring the Edges. Edge joined the Fiscal Depart ment as a payroll clerk on July 15, 1920. 'Through the years he has come to know countless Aggies in addition to county agriculture agents. Edge’s acquaintanceship with Aggies came full cycle in the 1940’s, when he began receiving fees from the sons of men he had known as students. More than 250 delegates will at tend the 14th annual Texas Indus trial Development Conference at A&M University Sept. 17-18, James R. Bradley, head of A&M’s Industrial Economics Research Di vision and conference director, an nounced. Among the speakers will be Ar thur A. Smith, Dallas bank execu tive; Paul R. Thomson, General Electric Co. official, and Robert McCulloch of Dallas, Ling-Temco- Vought, Inc., executive. Registration will begin at 8 a.m., followed by a welcome address by A&M President Earl Rudder and Smith’s talk on the future eco nomic picture for Texas. Smith is vice president and economist for Dallas’ First National Bank. Also speaking at the opening ses sion will be Thomson, manager of GE’s employee and community re lations. The Salem, Va., resident will discuss, “What Industry Looks for in a Town?” Growth of industry through the space program will be discussed by McCulloch, chairman of LTV’s ex ecutive committee, at a noon lunch eon. Other key speakers include John Navy Increasing Computer Usage To Solve Problems Increasing use of electronic com puters to help solve the Navy’s operational problems of growing complexities was forecast by a Navy research officer Monday at A&M University. Capt. Winfred S. Berg of the Of fice of Naval Research spoke at the opening luncheon of the second annual Research Reserve Seminar on Electronic Computers. The two- week seminar is sponsored by A&M and Naval Reserve Re search Company 8-3, a local unit. Thirty reserve officers are here from across the nation to hear lec tures by A&M faculty and others to write programs for the com puters at the A&M Data Process ing Center. On Aug. 28 they will tour the Manned Spacecraft Cen ter Data Computation Division and other faciilties at Houston. The seminar chairman is Comdr. B. C. Moore, a A&M mathematics professor in civilian life. The sem inar administrator is Capt. R. H. Ballinger, USNR, an English pro fessor at A&M. B. Turner, Jr., coordinator of Bay- port Industrial Development for Humble Oil & Refining; L. C. Au- Buchon of Dallas, regional buyer for Sears Roebuck & Co., and Har ry W. Clark of Austin, executive director of Texas Industrial Com mission. The conference, sponsored by the Industrial Economics Research Division of the Engineering Ex periment Station and co-sponsored by the Texas Industrial Develop ment Council, will attract bankers, railroad and chamber of commerce officials and others from industry. 4 Personnel Changes Made By Air Science Four personnel changes in the Air Force ROTC unit at A&M Uni versity have been announced by Col. Raymond Lee, head of A&M’s air science program. New personnel include Maj. Rob ert B. Moore, former ROTC in structor at the University of Geor gia and the Air Force Academy. Maj. Thomas F. Hines reports to A&M from Hawaii, where he flew C-130 aircraft to catch satellites returning from orbit. Another newcomer is Capt. Phil lip I. Caleb, previously an instruc tor at James Connally AFB in Waco. A University of Arkansas graduate, he has served overseas in Iceland, Scotland and England. Capt. Lester R. Hewitt Jr., a two-year member of the A&M air science staff, will report to Max well AFB in Alabama Sept. 3 for a new assignment. Major Moore, a 1947 graduate of the U. S. Military Academy, is a command pilot. He has flown the F-82, F-94, F-86 and F-100 fighter aircraft. In 1955 Major Moore became military training officer at the Air Force Academy and later served as combat operations officer in Tur key. He will serve as a branch chief at A&M. Major Hines, World War II vet eran, was recalled to duty during the Korean conflict and flew troop carrier planes. A native of Vir ginia, he served at Far East bases and received satellite recovery training at Edwards AFB, Calif. Vice-Presidential Nominee Has Impressive Experience By Associated Press Sen. Hubert Horatio Humphrey acts, thinks, eats and sleeps poli tics. The 53-year-old Minnesotan, after 16 years in the Senate, still has the ebullience, the optimism and the zest he brought to it as a fiery young liberal in 1949. But there have been changes. Humphrey candidly has moderated his views to the point that he now prefers enacting a cut-down bill into law rather than going down to defeat trying for the entire loaf. Always interested in issues and not only the strategy and tactics of politics, he has pursued this policy so successfully in the last half-dozen years that he has an impressive string of legislative credits. Humphrey and President John son are entirely similar in their complete absorption in political matters. And they are alike in a folksy, homespun approach to their trade. But in other ways the senator com plements Johnson on the Demo cratic ticket. Humphrey is a Northerner, a liberal throughout his career, and an intellectual. The chunky Minnesotan capped his career in Congress this year with 115 weeks of sluging work as floor manager for the far- reaching civil rights bill. His colleagues gave him high marks for this performance, in which a cloture vote to shut off a Southern filibuster was obtained for the first time on civil rights. Humphrey’s reward from the President was one of the pens used to sign the measure and a copy of Johnson’s speech to the nation at the ceremony. Inscribed on the copy were these words: “To Hubert Humphrey — without whom, it couldn’t have happened.” Johnson is reported by some of his associates planning a “high t road” campaign this year on the major issues, with the No. 2 man on the ticket tabbed to do the slugging with the Republicans. Humphrey seems to fill this bill perfectly. Articulate, immersed in issues of both foreign and domestic policy, with boundless energy, he is prepared to carry the Demo cratic campaign to every section of the country. His beltline has expanded a bit and his hairline has retreated, but his bouncy, bubbling energy re mains the same. Humphrey was born May 27, 1911, over a drugstore at Wallace, S. D., one of a succession of small town stores run by his father. He worked off and on in these stores for years, still calls himself a pharmacist. In 1929, he entered the Uni versity of Minnesota on a shoe string budget. But he had to go back to help in the family drug store in the depression and it was 1939 before he was graduated, winning membership in Phi Beta Kappa. SEN. HUBERT H. HUMPHREY chosen by the President as the best man for the job.