The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 23, 1966, Image 1

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

    LIBRARY
CAMPUS
10 COPIES B
Cht Bdttdlion
Volume 61
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1966
Number 287
Texas A&M has been awarded
a $312,000 grant for first stage
construction of a Graduate Edu
cation Center for engineering ma
terials and structural mechanics,
President Earl Rudder announced
Tuesday.
The U. S. Office of Education
award represents a third of the
estimated $936,000 cost of the new
facility.
Rudder also announced an addi
tional HEW grant of $149,285 for
remodeling the Civil Engineering
and Geology buildings at A&M.
Dr. Charles H. Sampson Jr.,
Department of Civil Engineering
head, said Tuesday he anticipates
actual construction may begin
this summer.
The new facility is to be con
structed behind the existing Civil
Engineering building, just south
and across the street from the
Cyclotron Institute now under
construction.
Sampson said the remaining
two thirds of cost of the Gradu
ate Education Center will be
shouldered by university funds.
GEC architect is William E. Nash
of Bryan.
Sampson said the structure will
be a two-story - and - basement
building containing primarily
special laboratories for use in
Activity Books Good
For Brenda Lee Show
Brenda Lee’s performance at
7:30 p.m. Saturday will be a
regular Town Hall show, accord
ing to Lilly Yeates of the
Memorial Student Center Busi
ness Office.
It is not an extra attraction,
and students with fall activity
cards will be admitted without
charge.
The show is the last Town Hall
presentation of the year.
Library Art-Loan Service
Goes Into Effect Thursday
W. B. MURPHY
Murphy To Speak
At Commencement
Here This Spring
W. B. Murphy, president of
Campbell Soup Company, will be
the featured speaker at spring
commencement May 28.
A trustee of Massachusetts In
stitute of Technology, Murphy re
ceived a B.S. in chemical engi
neering from the University of
Wisconsin. His alma mater later
honored him with a doctor of
laws degree.
Murphy joined Campbell in
1938. During World War II he
served as director of the War
Production Board’s facilities
division. He became president of
the soup company in 1953.
Murphy is a director of Amer
ican Telephone and Telegraph
Company and of Merck & Co.
He is chairman of the Business
Council and a trustee of the Wis
consin Alumni Research Founda
tion.
He is also active in commun
ity affairs in Camden, N. J. where
Campbell is headquartered and in
Pennsylvania where he resides.
Culture is on its way to the
Texas Aggies.
Cushing Library begins a
painting-loan service Thursday
and Friday through which 70
copies of famous art will be
come available to students.
The framed, ready-to-hang
prints will be charged out on a
semester basis, as books are bor
rowed.
The $1,700 collection will be
partially displayed for the first
time Thursday. A half-dozen
prints at a time will be displayed
near the main circulation desk.
Works that may be hung in
dormintory rooms and apart
ments on or off campus include
items by Dali, Michaelangelo,
Van Gogh, Goya, Picasso, Rem
brandt and Renoir in a variety
of subject matter. Painting
value ranges from $11.75 to $35
96 Candidates On Ballot
Thursday Election
To Decide Officers
By MIKE BERRY
Voting machines are being
readied in the basement of the
Memorial Student Center for the
spring class elections Thursday
from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Voter Registration Cards were
distributed earlier this week
through unit first sergeants and
civilian dorm presidents.
VA% mBIS®
CYCLOTRON GOING UP
Work is progressing smoothly on Texas variable energy cyclotron will occupy a 10-
A&M’s $6 million cyclotron under con- acre site. Due to be completed in January,
struction at the corner of Spence Street it is one of several construction projects on
and Farm Road 60. Expected to be the larg- campus,
est of its kind in the South, the 88-inch
A&M Receives $312,000
For Grad Education Canter
MARRIAGE FORUM
graduate teaching and research.
Gross area of the facility is
24,120 square feet, Sampson
noted. The building is designed
to provide space for 102 labora
tory students, plus space and
equipment for 44 graduate stu
dents.
The department head explained
that the new facility is phase one
of a three-phase project totaling
approximately $3 million com
pletely furnished. Phase two is
to cost approximately $1 million,
phase three about $900,000, he
said.
Sampson said the $149,285 for
remodeling will be used to air
condition the Civil Engineering
and Geology buildings, and to
excavate a basement under the
front portion of the Civil Engi
neering building for added class
and office space.
He said a portion of the funds
will be used to remodel some
rooms for laboratories and of
fices.
each.
“Persons borrowing pictures
will be informed of the cost and
accept responsibility for loss or
damage,” Calvin Boyer of li
brary acquisitions remarked. “If
this happens, the student must
pay and it becomes his lost or
damaged picture.”
Any student registered at
A&M’ except those living in
dormitories of which walls may
not be decorated, may check out
one print a semester. The col
lection will be limited to student
use initially, indicated acting li
brarian Rupert Woodward, al
though future additions to the
collection may allow faculty and
staff members to check out a
F’icasso.
Prints may be charged out
Thursday and Friday only be
tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Bowman Says
Anything Goes
After Wedlock
By ROBERT SOLOVEY
Battalion Staff Writer
Anything goes!
These were magic and comforting words to some ears as Dr.
Henry Bowman, University of Texas sociologist, spoke at the
fourth of five Marriage Forums Tuesday night in the YMCA.
Bowman explained that in marriage, anything that a couple
does that moves toward a satisfying experience for both is good
if done by mutual consent and in private.
“There are no rules but their rules and no standards but their
standards,” he said.
Speaking on “Sex in Human Relations-Marital,” Bowman said
sex is both the cause and effect of other problems.
“Couples use sex as a hook on which to hang their other
problems. The less successful sex is, the more conspicuous it
becomes to a couple and the more is said about it.”
Bowman then explained the responses of the male and female
during sexual intercourse. He said the male undergoes an important
ego involvement, but the female has an even larger ego involvement
during the process.
He said the number of orgasms a male can have is probably
limited to three or less in any given night but the number a female
can have is almost limitless.
“Sexual response in a man is like building a fire with dry
newspapers and dry matches, whereas in a female, it’s like build
ing a fire in the rain,” he added.
Bowman said a woman’s responsiveness builds slowly and prior
to sex a woman wants the male to be tender and loving, making her
aware that he needs her and that he cares.
He noted that during the so-called “after glow” period, a woman
needs even more love and reassurance.
“A man may feel overwhelming sleepiness but if he goes to
sleep then, he hasn’t missed the boat; he doesn’t even know the
boats exists,” he added.
“We make too much of “technique” by reading books that come
in a plain brown wrapper. You can’t mechanize love. It’s ridiculous.
What are you going to do, give a girl a catolog of postures from
which to choose?”
Bowman felt the huge parties and receptions that surround the
wedding day often leave a couple worn and fatigued.
He firmly believes a couple should rest for two or three days
before starting their sexual adjustment instead of rushing into it
because of tradition of an overzealous male nature while they are
both still tired.
Men seem to have an inborn desire to see unclothed women,
but women see little sense in seeing unclothed men, he said.
“On the wedding night girls frequently have inhibitions about
bodily exposure, even in front of their husbands.
“Couples need time to work out an adjustment. You can’t
experience marriage in 24 hours. It may take 24 weeks or even 24
years,” he said.
Many women fear the initial pain of intercourse because of
superstitions, reports of the practices of other cultures or simply
because of their own anatomy, Bowman added.
“No man can tell that a girl is a non-virgin.”
Bowman stressed there are many reasons that the female mem
brane or hymen may not be present.
He also said several conditions of its presence can interfere
with normal intercourse and that in either case a prospective wife
should have a premarital examination by her physician.
“The male must be patient and tender if the female is to
avoid pain or discomfort,” he said.
Discussing what he called periodicity. Bowman said a woman
usually goes through a monthly mood cycle.
“At times a woman may be very affectionate but for one or two
days a month she may be angry, depressed, and sometimes a little
cruel. This is perfectly natural and normal.”
Next week’s speaker for the concluding session of the Marriage
Forums will be Dr. Paul G. Wassenich from Texas Christian Uni
versity, who will discuss “Marrying Outside Your Faith — will
love find a way?”
Ninety-six juniors, sophomores
and freshmen are candidates for
the elections. Election Commis
sion Chairman Harris Pappas
said Tuesday additional voter
registration cards will be passed
out Thursday in the MSC in front
of the gift shop.
THE CANDIDATES for class
offices are: Senior President —
Kenneth N. Vanek, Jack H. Py-
burn, Louis K. Obdyke, Terrel S.
Mullins, Arturo Esquivel.
Vice President—Edward James
Worrel, Gene Neal Patton, Ken
neth A. Lamkin, Donald A. Hous
ton, Lawrence P. Heitman, Layne
Hale Connevy, Michael A. Callo
way, Joel Aldape.
Secretary-Treasurer — Dennis
N. Hohman, Patrick Kenneth
Gamble, Melvin Wayne Cockrell.
Social Secretary — Harry E.
Stengele Jr., Joseph O. McNabb.
Historian — Thomas M. De-
Frank, John P. Tyson, Terry C.
Agiletti, Jack M. Crook.
Memorial Student Center Rep
resentative — William Carl Hase-
loff, Robert A. Beene, Fred
James Wright.
Election Commission (5) —
Ewell Dwayne Scarlett, Robert P.
Welsh, Jerry Don Stevens, Jack
E. Myers, Edward L. Moreau,
Richard Kardys, James Halpin.
Senior Yell Leaders (3) — Bob
Lackland, Thomas C. Stone, Ed
ward M. Schulze, Michael G. Bry
an, Joseph Don Rehmet, Eugene
L. Riser.
JUNIOR CLASS President —
Fred L. May, Ronnie Coleman,
Gerald Wayne Campbell, Albert
N. Allen, Donald L. Allen.
Vice President — Darrel A.
Struss, Laurence S. Melzer, Mau
rice V. Main, Clarence T. Daugh
erty.
Secretary-Treasurer — Kerry
Williams, Charles A. Joyner.
Social Secretary — John Hi
Daly, Carl Feducia.
MSC Council Representative—
Donald D. Zipp, Charles P. Stew
art.
Election Commission (5) —
Michael D. Noonan, Peter J. In-
sani, Howard M. Hensel, Robert
F. Gonzales, Walter L. Cloyd.
Yell Leaders (2) — Richard A.
Pazderski, Loren J. Parsons,
John D. McLeroy, Eldon G. Tip
ping, Neal Wayne R o c k h o 1 d,
Dewey E. Helmcamp, Jerry Arn
old Fergeson, Michael R. Beggs.
SOPHOMORE CLASS Presi
dent — Larry Elvin Henry, Rob
ert N. Reinhardt, Harry G. Rob
erts, Kenneth F. Hensel, LeRoy
W. Edwards, Russell Lyle Bog-
gess.
Vice President James H.
Willbanks, Robert E. Wareing,
Joseph Scott Spitzer, Robert E.
Glazener, Roger L. Engelke, Har
vey Le Cooper, Bill E. Carter.
Secretary-Treasurer — Jerry
Keys, Len R. Hamer, Robert J.
Foley, G. Allen Eliff, Steven Lee
Bourn.
Social Secretary — Richard K.
Newman, James A. Mobley, Jack
J. Jumper.
MSC Council Representative —
Davis G. Mayes, Charles H. Row-
ton.
Election Commission (5) —
Robin A. Young, Robert Segner,
Walter Riggs, Larry Glenn Par
sons, Gary L. Davis, Stephen A.
Collins, Garland H. Clark.
JUNIOR SWEETHEART NAMED
Miss Patsy Biddle of Center, a Texas Christian University
freshman, reigns as Junior Class Sweetheart. The 5-6
brown-haired, brown-eyed beauty was crowned at
Junior Ball Saturday night.
the
New Traffic Circle Game: Rushin’ Roulette
By JOHN HOTARD
Battalion Special Writer
For those drivers who aren’t in
the know, the traffic circle is
now obliterated. In its place will
soon be a safe intersection with
signs, lights and umpteen mil
lion lanes for traffic.
The Texas Highway Depart
ment personnel are working as
best they can between the bad
weather and traffic dodging, and
they expect to be finished soon.
However . . . until the work is
completed, it’s everybody for
himself. This brings up the new
fun game called “Rushin’ Roul
ette.” It’s the same as “Chick
en,” except more people can play.
The situation is thus:
Whereas once upon a time
everybody merged and went
around in circles, everybody now
converges from 87,000 different
directions onto one spot.
This is where the game starts.
The rules are similar to a re
cent popular song. The guy on
the left hits the guy on the right
and the guy on the right yields
to the guy in the middle and the
guy in the middle stalls in the
center lane and the guy in the
rear . . . gets arrested by the
KK’s and has his meal card re
voked.
The object of the game is to
get the most points. Accumula
tion of points depends upon who
and what you are able to hit
without being hit yourself.
Points are awarded in the fol
lowing manner:
All 1964 (or later) Cadillacs,
Buicks and Oldsmobiles are
worth 15 points if you can hit
’em while they’re moving. Fords,
Chevrolets, Pontiacs and Ply-
mouths are worth 10 each.
Stalled cars don’t count.
Edsels don’t count.
All cars earlier than 1924 don’t
count.
Also, no fair picking on the
little guy unless he hits you first,
or takes advantage of your size
and cuts in on you, sneering at
the same time.
This eliminates Volkswagen
sedans. Volkswagen buses are
worth 25 points, but they only
count once, because when you’ve
hit one Volkswagen bus, you’ve
hit them all.
Bonus points are awarded for
hitting any car which is driven
by a prof whose course you
flunked last semester — 10 points
if it was an elective, 25 points
if you needed the course to grad
uate.
Additional points are also giv
en for every rubber highway
marker (the dunce hats) you hit.
They’re five points apiece.
Smudge pots are 30 points for
each one grabbed while your car
is moving. (Have you ever grab
bed a burning smudge pot while
the car is moving ?)
Stealing red flags out of work
men’s hands while passing
through the intersection is worth
15 points for each flag. (How
ever, the Highway Department
frowns upon your hitting their
personnel, and so 25 points will
be subtracted for each workman
knocked over while stealing flags.
Hitting stop signs and traffic
light poles don’t count unless, of
course, they fall, on another car.
One final note: DO NOT hit
any car that has a red gumball
machine on the top and a fishing
pole on the rear bumper. Not only
will you lose all your points, but
also your license, your ID card,
about $50 and 30 days of your
freedom.
Everyone understand the rules ?
Good.
All drivers
gines.
start your en-