A&M’s New Look Girls, Girls... SUMMER SCHOOL BRINGS OUT NEW LOOK AT AGGIELAND ...girls captured at Cain Swimming Pool are, from left, Suzann Ranson, Evelyn Logan, Melinda Burleson and Karen Thompson. (Photo by Battalion Photographer Herky Killingsworth. More Photos on page 4). Cbe Battalion COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1966 ^NTESfg^ Number 324 Schools Get OK In TOP Texas Opportunity Plan loans for students in area public and private colleges and universities will be available for the 1966 fall semester. Coordinating board officials met with student aid officers at Texas A&M University Thursday to im plement the $85 million program authorized by Constitutional a- mendment in November. A&M, Allen Military Academy, Prairie View A&JM, Mary Allen Junior College at Crockett and Blinn Junior College loan person nel met with C. R. Gahagan and Walter Guttman of the board in a day-long workshop to learn TOP loan procedures. To qualify for loans, students must be Texas residents, enrolled or accepted for enrollment with at least one-half course load, show need, be recommended by specifi ed persons of his home commun ity and comply with other estab lished board requirements. Financial need must show the applicant has insufficient resourc es to pay for his college educa tion. Recommendations must be furnished by two reputable per sons, including the student’s high school principal or counselor. Undergraduate loans may not exceed $1,000 per nine month semester, nor an aggregate amount of $5,000. Graduate stu dent limits are $1,500 and $7,500. Student loan officers will deter mine actual amounts. The board has set a six per cent interest rate on repayment, begin ning four months after the student is last enrolled. Repayment will be made monthly directly to the board. Final recommendation is by loan officers. The board com missioner will authorize all loans. Inquiries should be made to the student loan officer of the col lege the student plans to attend. Application forms will be avail able in early July. “A list of participating schools will be published as soon as all agreements are filed,” Gahagan said. “We expect to have almost 100 per cent participation.” The board f o r S e e s 15,000 loans amounting to $4 million this year. Accident Claims A&M Student’s Life Texas A&M student W. W. Compton was killed Sunday in an automobile accident near Llano, Texas. Compton was a freshman elec trical engineering student the past school year and a member of the Maroon Band. Compton’s parents reside in Sheridan, Texas, and he was re ported to have been working for Shell Oil Co. in Llano at the time of the accident. Carpenter Foreman Frank Smith of Texas A&M’s Build ings and Utilities Department inspect two desk tops. One illustrates the creative art of students, the other a revamped top of laminated plastic. Almost $100,000 will be spent by A&M this summer to put facilities in order for fall enrollment. Clean-Up Project Starts On Campus Painters, carpenters, plasterers and janitors are swarming over the Texas A&M campus this sum mer. They are principals in a $94,- 000 renovation program to put campus facilities in top condition for the expected 11,000 fall stu dents. Walter H. Parsons Jr., A&M’s Physical Plant director, projected the expenditures and outlined work to be completed by mid- September. Dormitory renovations heads the list of work for crews of building maintenance superin tendent Melvin Hartsfield and operations superintendent O. O. Haugen. Parsons said $67,000 of paint ing, plastering and repairs is scheduled for Aggieland dormi tories. Milner, Law, Puryear, Leggett and Mitchell halls are due minor plastering and paint ing. Walton Hall will undergo repair for a floor crack. Dormitory 21 is to have its outside wall resealed in addition to interior painting. Carpenters also will build a number of hog houses and pens for research projects of the Col lege of Veterinary Medicine. Parsons noted $25,000 is budgeted for new faculty-staff officers. Rooms 110, 114, 302 and 312 of Nagle Hall will be rebuilt for offices, as will Room 405 of the Academic Building, and Rooms 107 and 303 of Fran cis Hall. Temporary classrooms are be ing constructed in Building “K”. Rooms 206 and 405 of the Engi neering Building, 103 of Agricul tural Engineering, and 101, 104 and 106 of Plant Sciences are be ing converted to classrooms, Par sons added. Other Building and Utilities’ employes are repairing 1,000 tab let-arm chairs. Parsons revealed many of the tablet arms have been severely damaged through the years by students who pre ferred “creative” art, whittling or doodling to taking notes. For mica laminated tops are replac ing old-style wooden tops. The project will cost about $2,000, Parsons estimated. He announced plans for reworking approximately 1,000 tablet-arm desks during the next three years. One hundred and thirty cus todial employes comprise a task force for cleaning dormitories and general purpose buildings. Parsons said each dormitory is getting a thorough cleaning. General purpose buildings are getting similar treatment, he said, with cleaning of pipe vents, transoms and ducts included. Other employes are assigned to moving and exchanging furni ture for offices and classrooms being relocated. First Bank & Trust now pays 4%% per annum on savings cer tificates. —Adv. Registration Starts For Blood Program FIRST TO REGISTER . . . Virginia Patterson, left, registers for the special blood drive as Don Allen, drive chairman, looks on. Phillips Petroleum Fund Gives $4,000 Grant For Development De Ware Picked As Site By GERALD GARCIA Battalion Editor Registration started at 1 p. m. today and will continue until Tuesday for the special summer blood drive spon sored by the Student Sen ate’s Welfare committee. Don Allen, committee chair man, said persons interested in giving a pint of blood June 29-30 should call the Student Programs Office in the Memorial Student Center from 1-9 p.m. until Tues day. “We are conducting this drive because there is a critical short age of blood,” Allen said. “We want donations not only from the students but from the communi ty.” The drive will be conducted by the Wadley Research Foundation of Dallas, which directs spring blood campaigns at Aggieland. “We want to emphasize that the people will be giving not only to help the Aggies, but to help themselves,” Allen emphasized. “Each contributor will establish a blood account for his family. “All community donors will re ceive the same protection as Ag gies through the foundation. Should the blood not be used by the donor or his family within a year, it will be given to help save the lives of children suffering from leukemia. Site for the blood collection is DeWare Field House and collect ing will start at 7:30 p.m. daily. Alpha Phi Omega National Service Fraternity, which has co sponsored the annual spring blood drive, will assist with the special drive. Gene Pollard, APO member, urges all members of the fra ternity to sign in the MSC Senate office for times they will be available to work, and to leave their summer addresses on the APO board in the YMCA. The regular spring program has been in effect here for nine of the past 10 years. More than 3,500 units of blood have been collected. The Wadley Research Institute and Blood Bank was established as a non-profit organization by Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Wadley in memory of their grandson, who died of leukemia. It exists solely from gifts and research grants. A $4,000 grant by the Phillips Petroleum Company Professional Development Fund has been awarded to Texas A&)M, Presi dent Earl Rudder announced. The Phillips fund supports pro fessional growth and development of students and faculty in engi neering, physical sciences mathe matics, statistics and business ad ministration. A&M’s chemical, mechanical, electrical,^ petroleum, civil, indus trial and chemistry departments, Colleges of Geoscience and Busi ness Administration and Place ment Office will benefit from the grant, indicated Phillips officials M. R. Hayes and James P. Jones of Bartlesville, Okla. “It is our desire that funds be used to reward outstanding stu dent leaders and deserving young faculty members,” said Hayes, general services department man ager. Stipends will be administered by deans and department heads for student and faculty awards, fees for off-campus professional societies meetings, “visiting speak ers expenses, on-campus high school counselors and teachers programs and purchase of refer ence, technical or professional publications for departmental use. A&M was selected as one of the first fund participants for 1966-67. Amounts awarded are related to number of graduates employed by Phillips and future recruitment potential. Room reservation cards for the fall semester are now available in the Housing Office, reports Allan M. Madeley, Housing Man ager. This procedure only applies to students who expect to live in a dormitory and have not yet sign ed up for a room. Students who entered as fresh- Architect Unit Gets 4 Profs Four new assistant professors in Texas A&M’s School of Archi tecture have been announced by Chairman Edwax-d J. Romieniec. Appointments are effective Sept. 1. They include: Michael Schneider of Minnea polis, Minn., now working in de velopment of a building complex for alcoholics in that city. He eaxmed a bachelor of fine arts de gree at the University of Minnea- sota, a bachelor of architecture at Harvard University, and a mas ters of architecture at Massachu setts Institute of Technology. A practicing ai'chitect, Schneid er has done extensive research in rehabilitation programs for alco holics. Robert Nichols of Boston, now doing research work for Buck minster Fuller, an internationally- known architect in structural com ponents for buildings. Nichols has a bachelors degree in industrial design from Illinois Institute of Technology and a bachelor of architecture degree from Har vard. Nichols has extensive research experience in the Chicago and Boston areas. John Exley of La Grande, Ore., currently a practicing architect in La Grande. Exley earned a B.S. in landscape architecture at the University of Oregon and an M.S. in landscape architecture from Harvard. He has varied experience with nationally known architects. George Mann of New York, N. Y., now a research architect spe cializing in hospital design. Ho has a bachelors degi’ee in archi tecture and a masters in architec ture and public health facilities from Columbia. Mann has expei’- ience with major firms in the East. At A&M, he will work in hospital research at the Graduate Research Center. men in June should fill out blue cards and upperclassmen should fill out buff cards. Students who have a $20 deposit on file will not have to pay any additional fees to reserve rooms for the fall. Students who have already made reservations are reminded that Aug. 15 is the deadline for cancellation. Room Reservation Cards Available