The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 11, 1966, Image 6

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    THE BATTALION
Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, August 11, 1966
BRIEFS...
(Continued from page 5)
Architecture School
Sets Exhibit Displays
Working prototypes of new
hospital rooms will be exhibited
Aug. 22 at Texas A&M’s School
of Architecture.
James R. Patterson, project
director of a three-year research
program in A&M’s Research and
Graduate Center, said the exhibit
will be a preview of a later show
ing in Chicago.
Patterson and his research
team has constructed proto
types after analyzing and devel
oping single and multiple bed
forms for patient - care rooms,
and in groups as nursing units.
The research is supported by
Public Health Service grants.
Exhibit hours Aug. 22 are 9 to
11 a.m. and 2 to 4 p.m., Patter
son announced. He said Joel No
vak, research consultant for the
Public Health Service in Wash
ington, will review the work.
The exhibit will be seen by an
estimated 30,000 persons attend
ing the 68th American Hospital
Association convention Aug. 29-
Sept. 1, in Chicago. A&M will
have the only university exhibit
at the convention.
Accompanying Patterson to
Chicago will be Architecture
Chariman Edward Romieniec,
and graduate students Michael
Greer and Russell Stogsdill of
Fort Worth, Douglas Ogilvie of
San Antonio, Dan Malcolm of
Canadian, and Frank Still of
Temple.
A&M Professor
Edits 2 Articles
Research instruments for
measuring attitudes toward
school buses and guidance pro
grams are described by Texas
A&M professor Donald G. Barker
in summer editions of two jour
nals.
“Measurement of Attitudes
Toward Riding the School Bus”
appeared in the July issue of
Psychology in the schools, a
quarterly journal of research
opinioh and practice.
“Development of a Scale of
Attitudes Toward School Guid
ance” was printed in the monthly
publication of the American Per
sonnel and Guidance Association,
the Personnel and Guidance Jour
nal.
Barker, associate professor of
education and psychology, spe
cializes in attitude measurement.
His article on bus riding atti
tudes was supported by A&M’s
Fund for Organized Research.
Both publications were through
cooperation of several Texas pub
lic schools.
Carter Gets
Scholarship
Gregory S. Carter of San An
tonio has been named recipient
of a Chevron Oil Company schol
arship from the firm’s California
Division to the Texas A&M De
partment of Civil Engineering.
Carter, senior civil engineering
major with a 2.33 grade point
ratio, was selected for the $500
award by the department’s schol
arship committee and okayed by
chief engineer at Chevron.
A $1,000 grant was made, the
other $500 going to the depart
ment.
“The department portion will
be utilized in a teaching improve
ment fund and assisting research
projects,” announced Dr. Charles
H. Samson Jr., head.
“We wish to promote desirable
contacts between this company
and the university with the ulti
mate view of placing a number
of its graduates in our organiza
tion each year,” disclosed G. K.
Carr of Chevron’s personnel de
partment. Several Chevron offi
cials are A&M graduates.
Carter is a distinguished stu
dent, member of Chi Epsilon, Phi
Eta Sigma and the YMCA’s Po
laris Council. The son of Lt. Col.
and Mrs. C. G. Carter, 902 Mount
Whitney, Stead AFB, Nev., will
be commanding officer of Squad
ron 7 in the Cadet Corps next
fall. He was graduated from
Alamo Heights High School in
San Antonio.
3 Task Forces
Set Meetings
Three task forces of the group
studying Texas agriculture have
scheduled meetings this month.
Kenneth Wolf, Extension agri
business specialist at Texas A&M
and coordinator of the study,
said meeting dates and places
are being announced to allow
persons' on one task force, a
chance to attend general meet
ings of the other task forces.
The natural resource conserva-
tiOfi task force will meet at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Memorial
Student Center.
The task force on crops will
meet at 10 a.m. Wednesday also
in the MSC.
The human resources task
force will meet at 9 a.m. Aug. 20
at the Villa Capri Hotel and Con
vention Center in Austin.
Wolf said all task forces have
been “digging into” the compre
hensive study of Texas agricul
ture. The study was requested
by the Texas A&M board of di
rectors.
There are five task forces in
all. The two not meeting as a
group in August are the livestock,
poultry and animal products and
supplying, processing, and dis
tributing industries task forces.
Noted Horsemen
To Judge Show
Two well known Southwestern
horsemen will judge the 1966
Texas 4-H Horse Show in San
Antonio on Friday and Saturday,
according to B. F. Yeates, Exten
sion horse specialist at Texas
A&M.
They are Jack H. Bates of Al
buquerque, N. M., and John
Trimmier Jr., of Hale Center.
The horse show will get under
way at Joe Freeman Coliseum at
7 a.m., Friday and continue
through Saturday night.
Bates, a professional horseman
for 18 years, has wide experience
in teaching boys and girls as well
as in training horses and judging
shows. In recent years, he has
developed 50 youngsters into
state champions and currently
has some 50 students enrolled in
his horse equitation and horse
manship school.
Trimmier is known widely for
his accomplishments as a horse
breeder and as a showman. He
has trained many champions in
cluding the top all-round horse
of the Golden Spread Quarter
Horse Association in 1965, and
the 4th place cutting horse in
NCHA competition in 1964.
Trimmier also has served many
years as a 4-H adult leader in
Hale County.
Swimming Meet
Set Monday
An estimated 100 boys will
compete in the Arrowmoon Dis
trict Boy Scout Swim Meet Mon
day at Bryan Municipal Swim
ming Pool.
Arrowmoon Activities Chair
man Walter H. Parsons Jr. said
all registered Boy Scouts may
compete in Swimmer or Begin
ner Divisions.
Events begin at 7:30 p.m.,
with the public invited to view
the action free.
Raymond Garza is meet direc
tor. Swimming events include
free style, distance plunge, med
ley relay, free style relay, breast
stroke, distance swim, back
stroke, towel rescue and indi
vidual medley relay.
Beginner events feature bal
loon race, distance glide, potato
race, penny race and potato race
relay. Ribbons will be awarded
winners.
The Explorer Scout Meet is
scheduled Aug. 19 at P. L. Downs
Natatorium at Texas A&M.
Ag Footballers
To Represent
A&M At Rally
Three senior linemen — center
Jim Singleton and guards Gary
Kovar and Don Koehn — will
represent the Texas Aggies at
the Southwest Conference Foot
ball Rally in Fort Worth Aug. 18.
The trio is expected to com
prise the center of A&M’s offen
sive line next fall. At the close
of spring drills they emerged as
offensive starters.
Kovar, from Houston Jones,
and Koehnj from Brenham, are
two-year lettermen. Singleton
won his first letter last season
but joined the other two as start
ers on Coach Gene Stallings’ first
Aggie edition. He is from San
Antonio Alamo Heights.
None of the three is large by
current Collegiate standards.
Koehn is the heaviest at 215 while
Singleton is the lightest at 196.
Kovar is Sandwiched between at
208.
The annual rally, sponsored by
the Greater Fort Worth Sports
Committee, is scheduled for 7 p.m.
at the Texas Hotel. All eight
SWC schools are represented by
three players each. Head foot
ball coaches of the eight Schools
give brief talks, to© featured
speaker this year is Bud Wilkin
son, former Oklahoma coach.
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