0 J Che Battalion ^JNEWS^ y ( Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 1966 Number 260 Fish To Hempstead Dean Reveals Parking Switch By TOMMY DeFRANK Battalion News Editor Dean of Students Janies P. Hannigan announced Wednesday that effective next semester freshmen will be required to park motor vehicles in the “Hempstead” parking lot on the southeast corner of the campus. The ruling will apply to all students who have passed less than 30 semester hours and will include freshmen living in the north dormitory area. Hannigan stressed the change would probably not be perma nent and was an attempt to alleviate the crowded parking situation on the campus’ north west side. “The change is primarily due to the fact that there are too many people with cars in the area of the northwest comer,” he said. He added that many students living in that area have been deprived of normal parking space off-campus by construction of the underpass at State Highway 60 and old Highway 6. But Hannigan revealed a large tract of land owned by the uni versity west of the campus will eventually be converted into parking space to ease the park ing squeeze. He explained that railroad tracks west of old Highway 6 will be tom out to build the underpass, leaving the university free to utilize the adjacent land. The proposed lot would run several hundred yards along the west edge of the campus and would include all land from the highway west to the site of the railroad tracks. Hannigan said work will also begin in the near future on con struction of a parking lot south of present parking facilities be hind G. Rollie White Coliseum. The dean noted, that campus paved and gravel parking lots and streetside parking will ac commodate 6,495 vehicles, yet 7,782 cars were registered for the fall semester. “If they ever all show up at the same time,” he pointed out, “we’ll be shy some 1,300 spaces.” Hannigan said an increase in parking fees for the 1966-67 school term is under discussion as a means of financing parking lot additions and improvements. “No state funds can be used for parking facilities, so it is quite possible there may be an in crease in parking fees,” Han nigan said. He added that the change in regulations is an attempt to allow freshmen to keep cars on campus, instead of banning them as do most colleges when numbers exceed available spaces. Hannigan noted some parking spaces have been walled off by various construction projects but will eventually be restored to normal use. The dean also hinted that in the future the inner campus might be blocked off to through traffic as a result of increased campus traffic. “Our long-range plans are to increase as much as possible the parking facilities close to the perimeter of the main campus and try to hold down vehicular traffic at the academic center of the campus,” he said. A&M Receives $185,000 Gift For Scholars Texas A&M University has been awarded a three-year $185,- 000 Ford Foundation grant for Latin American and North Amer ican scholars, President Earl Rudder an nounced the award Thursday and named Dr. Jack D. Gray, inter- Batt Staffers Win Awards Two Battalion staffers won awards last week in state and national writing competition. Glenn Dromgoole, editor, took second place in the editorial writing division of the Associat ed Press Managing Editors of Texas contest, announced Sun day in Corpus Christi. The senior journalism major from Sour Lake was the only college student to win an award in the APME competition. Tommy DeFrank, news editor, won a $100 scholarship for his eighth place tie in a national feature writing contest sponsor ed by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation. DeFrank, a junior journalism major from Arlington, wrote his prize-winning articles about de serted locks on the Brazos River. It appeared in The Battalion Nov. 11. Dromgoole’s editorial was en titled ::Our Answer” and appear ed in The Battalion in conjunc tion with the telegram sent by 2,148 A&M students to President Johnson proclaiming their sup port for United States involve ment in Viet Nam. national programs director, to supervise the program. Gray said 8-12 persons will be involved, in team research pro jects in the Dominican Republic and Mexico. “The grant is the first for ‘task force research’,” he noted. Each research team will in clude two professors and two graduate students. One of the graduate students will be a Latin American. Further plans call for one pro fessor on each team to have ex perience in international work. “Our plan calls for the grad uate students to live overseas to do field research,” Gray explain ed. “Not more than three months each year will be spent overseas by each of the professors.” Projects are being considered in agricultural marketing and plant diseases. Other possible fields include engineering, edu cation and sociology. Each field will have its own “task force”. Final Week at Texas A&M dents yet crucial to others, his diploma as he packs his He received his diploma at FOR SOME AN END, FOR OTHERS A BEGINNING was meaningless to some stu- weekend. At right sophomore Howard Hensel crams for At left Aubrey Lange clutches still another final. Exams continue through Saturday car prior to leaving for good, morning, with registration for the spring semester to Commencement Exercises last begin Feb. 4. 800 ID Cards Still Unclaimed More than 800 students must pick up permanent iden tification cards before they will be allowed to register for the spring semester, a regis tration official said Wednes day. Bob Gleason, associate di rector of admissions, said most of the unclaimed cards belong to special students and facul ty-staff members registered for courses. “Students who have the old ID card will be blocked tem porarily at registration,” Glea son warned. Cards may be picked up at room 7 of the Richard Coke Building. Fall Term Graduates Hear Clergyman, Army General Texas A&M graduates Satur day viewed America’s strength through the eyes of a clergyman and a general. “The United States will defend its allies at any level of war fare,” Army Maj. Gen. Harry H. Critz declared. “We are willing to help friendly countries over come conditions which lead to situations such as Viet Nam.” Rabbi Robert J. Schur told graduates “the strength of our nation is no more than the weak est among us.” Critz, commander of the Artil lery and Missile Center at Fort Sill, Okla., spoke at ROTC coin- Brazosport School Executive To Join Education Faculty Dr. Lester S. Richardson, sup erintendent of the Brazosport School District, will join the De partment of Education and Psy chology June 1, Dr. Paul Hen- sarling, department head, has an nounced. An A&M graduate and former superintendent of A&M Consoli- Piremen battle a stubborn blaze that caused $65,000 in damage to the Lincoln School complex south of the campus last week. The fire, whipped by high winds, destroyed classrooms housing the sixth through FIRE GUTS LINCOLN SCHOOL twelfth grades at the Negro school, leaving only two classroom buildings standing. Ap proximately 100 students were displaced by the fire and are being phased in at A&M Consolidated schools. dated Schools, Richardson will teach and assume department re sponsibility in educational ad ministration. Richardson, 46, will be chair man of education administration, have major responsibility in the statewide conference for school administrators and supervisors at A&M in June, direct doctoral can didate research and carry on in dependent research projects. “He has developed an out standing program for Brazosport schools,” said Dr. Frank W. R. Hubert, dean of Liberal Arts. “We feel fortunate to acquire his services, particularly at this time when educational enterprises are receiving support at the state Magazine Official To Speak Friday John J. Cain, a vice president of McCall’s Magazine, will speak at a breakfast sponsored by two journalism groups Friday. Hosting the event will be Al pha Delta Sigma, an advertising fraternity, and the Society of A&M Journalists. Cain, after a three-year term as publisher of Redbook Maga zine, was appointed assistant to the president of McCall Corpora tion Jan. 1, 1965. He has also been assistant pub lisher and advertising director of Flower and Garden Magazine, vice president of Selders-Jones- Covington Advertising Agency and sales promotion manager of Western Auto Supply Company. A native of Greenwood, Miss., Cain is a 1949 graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism and present lives in Greenwich, Conn. and national level. “We have been seeking a per son of his stature for over a year to fill this vital area of respon sibility. He will give strength to our doctoral program, especially as it relates to preparation of school superintendents,” Hensarl- ing added. Richardson has been at Braz osport since 1960. Prior to his present post, the school admin istrator was professor of educa tion and director of the Bureau of Educational Research and Services and a member of the Faculty Graduate Council at the University of Houston. He acquired B.S. and master of education degrees at A&M in 1946 and 1948, receiving the Ph.D. in education and adminis tration at Houston in 1954. He engaged in postdoctoral work at Columbia University and the University of Chicago. After leaving Consolidated in 1957, Richardson was superin tendent of Cuero schools two years. The educator holds member ship and office in many national scientific and professional soci eties. He is a member of the commission on colleges for the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, a repre sentative on the College Entrance Exam Board until 1968 and pres ident of the Gulf Region Educa tional TV Affiliates, KUHT-TV, Houston. Richardson is listed in Who’s Who in American Education, Who’s Who in the Southwest, participates in civic, service and cultural activities and was a starter on the 1939 national championship football team at A&M. missioning exercises. Schur ad dressed the mid-year graduating class. “We are organizing to convince the forces of world communism that we, as a government, are prepared to meet their attack against our friends and allies at whatever level of conflict they choose,” Critz said. “And what is more important, we are prepared to take the ini tiative to assist our friends in solving their problems, which, left untended, lead to such sense less slaughter, as that perpetuat ed in Viet Nam today by the Communist government of Ha noi.” Sixty-three Aggies received commissions as second lieute nants, including 50 Army, 10 Air Force and S Marine Corps. “The dangers you face are not all on the battlefied,” Critz pointed out. “Today’s soldier is subject to other dangers as dead ly as bullets. He is confronted with the faceless and subtle virus of apathy and the creeping malig nancy which can attack his mor ale and haunt him with questions concerning the significance of his service. “Weapons of the mind and heart have sustained brave men in troubled times before and they are no less valuable in this pe culiar and troubled time in which we serve,” the general concluded. Rabbi Schur challenged 551 mid-year graduates to conquer frontiers within themselves. He was introduced by University President Earl Rudder, who con ferred 31 doctorates, 106 master’s and 414 bachelor’s degrees. “No nation can measure its accomplishments in terms of gross national product and be satisfied,” the rabbi of the Beth- E1 Congregation in Fort Worth said. “The test is not how high can the gifted, energetic, con scientious rise, but to what level can we lift the least in us. “Life’s challenge still must be met when we learn to adjust and recognize the unity of man,” Schur added. “After the most distant frontier has been con quered, the most extensive and complex frontier remains. Not outward, but inward we must turn to find the treasured wealth and power and promise of man.” Development Speaker Says Nonmilitary Warfare Rising Study of nonmilitary warfare techniques, inexpensive compared to conventional weapons and methods, is increasing in the United States, Executive Devel opment Program participants at Texas A&M were told Tuesday. Frank R. Barnett, president of the National Strategy Informa tion Center, Inc., of New York, said such techniques were em ployed twice in Czechoslovakia and improved by Cuba. “Czechoslovakia, including the second most important munitions works in Western Europe, twice fell to nonmilitary warfare tech niques,” Barnett reminded man agement personnel at the three- week course. “Not one drop of blood was spilled nor was one shot fired as the Czechs were taken under rule by the Nazis and Communists. “Capture of this munitions cen ter both times led to untold U. S. military casualties on the ‘hot’ battlefield,” he went on. “This very inexpensive weapons system, which leaves factories, oil re fineries, ports and cities intact, is now being used in South and Central America.” The communications expert warned the same weapon is used by Communist Red China, with a new twist. “The new power center in Pek ing is using nonmilitary war fare and giving it an even more sinister ingredient: racial dis crimination,” he declared. “Rus sia did not mix in racial hatred. The Red Chinese are not re strained. They are introducing racism into their propaganda themes.” Space Fair Needs Help For Porpoise A “Help Wanted” sign has been posted by Hydro - Space Fiesta '66 Vice Chairman Bill Gross. Gross needs help caring for a porpoise which may visit the Fiesta Feb. 7-10. Biggest need is for a plastic pool or other container four feet deep and 18 feet in diameter that will hold 6,000 gallons of water. Other requirements include a one horsepower pump, a three- foot diameter pressure filter, 1,- 500 pounds of salt, a heater, transportation via truck or air plane, a fence to restrain specta tors and a night guard. The porpoise, provided by Fred Eckhart, general manager of Sea-Arama in Galveston will be accompanied by Sea-Arama Cur ator Jim Kelly.