Cbe Battalion FINAL EXAM SCHEDULE Classes meeting at 1 p.m. will be tested at 7 p.m. tonight. 7 a.m. classes— 7 a.m. Friday 9 a.m. classes—10 a.m. Friday 11 a.m. classes— 2 p.m. Friday Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1966 Number 333 Aggies Open Grid Practice Sept. 1 Sophs To Form Nucleus WILL TEXAS A&M’S . .. It could be Harry Ledbetter, top, or . . ‘Penny’ To Retire From A&M Aug. 31 Walter L. “Penny” Penberthy, professor of health and physical education at Texas A&M 40 years, will retire Aug. 31. “Mr. Penny,” as he is known by students, was hired immedi ately after graduation in 1926 from Ohio State University by D. X. Bible as instructor of phy sical education and director of intramurals. Penberthy was named head of the department in 1941 and dean of men in 1947. Later he became Student Activities Department head, where he served until that department was absorbed by the Memorial Student Center. He Graduates Get DMG Honors Six Distinguished Military Grad uates are among 14 Texas A&M graduates to be commissioned in the U. S. Army Friday. Three of the new officers have applied for Regular Army commis sions, announced Lt. Col. Rayford Brooks. He will administer the oath and present commissions in the Military Science Department at 10 a.m. One of the largest groups com missioned during the summer at A&M, the 14 officers fulfilled ROTC training earlier and com pleted academic work this summer to qualify for commissions. DMG status enables the new officer to apply for a Regular Army com mission. Other commissions will be in the Reserve. Distinguished Military Graduates include Jerry L. Jones of White- wright, Rumaldo Z. Juarez of Robs- town, Larry B. Kirk and Benny R. Smith of Dallas, Eddie F. Scheer of Henrietta and Jack B. Ramsey Jr. of Greenville. Jones, Kirk and Scheer applied for RA commissions. Others to be commissioned are Thomas M. Blackwell, Weslaco; Barry J. C. Brummett, Waco; Robert H. Cole, El Paso; David H. Dodson, Decatur; Joseph T. Ely Jr., Oklahoma City; Edgar J. Harvey, Temple; George W. Keester, Ne- ierland and Charles O. McAdams, then returned to teaching. Carl Tishler, Department of Health and Physical Education head, said Penberthy developed the intramural program at A&M to a level that made it the finest voluntary program in the nation. “This was due to Penny’s abil ity to organize and communicate with students,” Tishler ex plained. “Penny has the reputa tion of knowing more students by name than any person on campus. His philosophy is ‘serv ice to students,’ so it is under standable that his intramural program was superior and that he became a master teacher.” The owner of a small ranch near Carlos, Penberthy plans to spend considerable time looking after his cattle, hunting and fish ing. “His associates at A&M will miss Penny, his cheerfulness, his willingness to help others and the counseling and guidance he gave graduate assistants and new staff members,” Tishler re marked. “He was considered a moral builder by his colleagues. We know that his retirement is in name only—that he will con tinue to contribute to the profes sion and Texas A&M students.” A&M To Award 445 Degrees Names of 445 degree candi dates for Friday commencement exercises at Texas A&M have been announced by Registrar H. L. Heaton. Included in the list are 51 doc toral candidates. Masters degrees are being sought by 250 persons. Baccalaureate degree candi dates total 144. First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings cer tificates. —Adv. NSF Students Finish Friday Seventy high school seniors at Texas A&M the past six weeks check out of secondary science training programs in mathe matics and geology Friday. The high ability students will be addressed by President Earl Rudder in a final meeting at 10 a.m. Friday in the Memorial Stu dent Center Ballroom. The president will present cer tificates to participants and an nounce scholarship winners. The National Science Founda tion-supported programs compet itively selected students, primari ly on the basis of scholarship, to participate. NSF coordinator Coleman Loyd expects a large number of parents to attend the final ses sion. Lectures, labs and field trips comprised the six-week course of study. Math students were in structed in the Data Processing Center’s IBM 7094 computer and toured the nuclear reactor and network analyzer. They wrote programs for the 7094. Geology students visited an NASA research laboratory, maj or oil company in the Houston- Galveston area, studied and col lected specimens in Texas and Oklahoma, inspected a salt mine and tourned A&M’s Data Proc essing Center, Electron Micro scopy Lab and Nuclear Science Center. Texas A&M will start fall foot ball practice Sept. 1 as head coach Gene Stallings goes into his second season with a “sopho- morish outlook.” Stallings, whose now famous slogan “Make Something Hap pen” will prevail again this year, will greet 24 returning lettermen who will form the nucleus for this fall’s squad. “We’re gonna sell ’em on the idea that you can win with soph omores,” Stallings said. “They’re gonna have to play like juniors, and win like juniors.” The idea he will sell to his team, and to all Aggie support ers, is a necessity for the upcom ing grid season. From Sept. 1, when the first workouts take place until the final gun sounds in Austin on Thanksgiving day, sophomores are going to carry a large part of the load. Stallings will stress defense and punting this year. He will likely start seven sophomores on defense, and his punter will be sophomore Steve O’Neal. But sophomores can be assets and split end Tommy Maxwell, half back Wendell Housley and quar terbacks Edd Hargett and Char lie Riggs hope to prove second- year men can win. Also strong from last year’s fish squad will be tackle Rolf Krueger and Harvey Aschen- beck, rover Joe Wood and de fensive backs Tom Sooy, Jack Whitmore, Javier Vela and Vance Brack. These sophomores and the rest of the 1966 squad will report for the evening meal Tuesday. They will receive physicals and draw equipment the next day, with the first workout scheduled for 9 a.m. Sept. 1. “I haven’t made any decisions on players and positions. We’ll start out about the way we ended last year, with the exception of a little shifting around in the de fensive secondary. I’ll be chang ing that a little. It’s really too early to decide, though,” Stal lings said. “We’ll be a little better overall. The Aggies can’t stand another 3-7 season—I know I can’t.” “We’ll have 16 practice days before we open with Georgia Tech. That’ll be enough time. They have the same amount of time as we do. The staff and I are looking forward to the begin- jning of workouts, and to having all the players back for another season,” he concluded. The top prospect for the Ag gies is Maurice “Mo” Moorman, the 6-5 250-pound tackle transfer from Kentucky. He hasn’t played a varsity game, yet is already mentioned by some as all-Ameri ca material. Back from the first “Make Something Happen” squad will be offensive guards Don Koehn and Gary Kovar, strongside end Ed Breding, center Jim Single- ton, defensive guard Ken Lam- kin, defensive end Grady Allen and lihebacker Robert Cortez. Other returnees who will car ry a large load will be Jack Py- burn, Harry Ledbetter, Bill Sal lee, Lloyd Curington, Dan Sch neider, Ronnie Lindsey, Dan Westerfield .and Larry Lee. . -•< ■ s': ' . .. NUMBER 1 QUARTERBACK PLEASE STAND UP? sophomores Edd Hargett, left, or Charlie Riggs. These three will fight it out for the starting berth. Food Service Getting Facelifting, Repairs Food Service Department alter ations are under way at Texas A&M to take care of increased enrollment for the 1966-67 school year. Addition of $47,000 equipment and alterations will touch Sbisa and Duncan Dining Halls and the Memorial Student Center, an nounced department d i r ec t o r Fred Dollar. Sbisa will be equipped with its fifth cafeteria line, a cash cafe teria line of completely portable equipment to be located in the large dining room on the east side of the building. The installation will allow cafe terias facing on Houston Street to handle board-paying students, Dollar explained. The 67-foot long cash line can be disassembled in 30 minutes to make way for dances and other events in the main hall, food man ager Harold Thearl said. The $16,000 facility will parallel the kitchen wall on the east end of the main room, partitions sep arating the cash customer area from Corps of Cadets family style service on the south end. “The cash line will be complete ly self-service,” Thearl noted. Features of the arrangement in clude an ice dispensing machine and meter-flow coffee, tea and milk along with regular food dis plays. The line will become dou ble at coffee and checkout count ers, to handle about 500 custom ers, he added. No civilian student family style meals will be served. New equipment valued at $31,- 000 includes new 80-quart mixers for the bake shop and Sbisa kitch en, ice maker, automatic roll ma chine capable of turning out 250 rolls a minute and an automatic pot washer for Duncan. A $4,000 alteration to upstairs Houston street cafeteria entrance will provide smaller doors. Oth er work includes painting and plastering Sbisa’s exterior and entrances. Thearl said food service em ployment figures will remain the same though Sbisa expects to serve 6,000—an increase of 15 per cent over September, 1965— and Duncan 2,000. The depart ment employs 260 fulltime and 225 students in the MSC and din ing halls. MSC fountain room and cafe teria will be closed for staggered periods Monday through Septem ber 12, he went on. Orientation Set, For Teachers Academic Year Institute par ticipants meet for general orien tation on the 1966-67 school year at Texas A&M Monday. National Science Foundation programs coordinator C. M. Loyd said 33 junior high science teach ers will meet at 9 a.m. in Room 146 of the Physics Building. A 6:30 p.m. barbecue at the Bryan Municipal swimming pool Monday will welcome the science teachers here for advanced stud ies. As graduate students under the AYI program, participants’ course work will be applicable on master of science degrees in edu cation. Reveille II Dead Fall Services Slated New Christy Minstrels Open Town Hall Series Sept. 30 The 1966-67 Town Hall Series of Texas A&M’s Me morial Student Center has been announced by Chairman Sammy Pearson. The New Christy Minstrels will open the series Sept. 30 at G. Rollie White Coliseum. A&M hosts Texas Tech in Southwest Conference football the next night. Next come “The Four Freshmen” on Oct. 28. The Aggies tangle with Arkansas the following night. On Dec. 7, “Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians” will hold the spotlight. Johnny Mathis comes to Aggieland Feb. 13, followed by the University of Texas Concert Choir and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra March 19. Billed as Town Hall Extras are Doc Severinsen on Oct. 4 and the Harlem Globetrotters Feb. 6. Another extra is to be arranged for the week of March 20-25. “Music for Sunday Afternoon” programs will feature James Dick on Nov. 13, Sam Hinton Dec. 4, and Sergiu Luca Feb. 19. Burial of Texas A&M mascot Reveille II at the main entrance of Kyle Field will be deferred un til the student body returns to the campus in September. The 15-year-old tan and white Shetland Shepherd dog was put to sleep Tuesday. Kidney failure and arthritis made the mascot’s last few months painful. “Burial services will be strictly by student decision,” Dean of Stu dents James P. Hannigan said. “The Student Senate, yell leaders and cadet officers of Company E-2 will have responsibility for ar rangements.” A plot next to the grave of Reveille I at the concourse on the north end of Kyle Field has been reserved for the second mascot. Rev had been in critical health since late April, when she had a brush with death due to kidney failure and arthritis. Dr. E. W. Ellett, associate professor of vet erinary medicine and surgery, said the course of action was decided because of her condition. A&M student leaders and offi cials concurred in the decision to allow Reveille II rest from her painful last years. “Reveille had arthritis of the hips and coudn’t get up,” Ellett said. “We couldn’t see putting her through a long course of treat ment and felt this would be the best and most humane thing to do.” The tan and white mascot has been on a low protein diet several years to reduce stress on her kid neys. Anti-inflammatory agents and other medications to control pain have been standard for her the last four months. Both of the mascot’s ailments were largely due to old age. The aging dog lived through 100 equiv alent years for a man. Reveille II was presented to the A&M student body in 1952 by Arthur Weinert of Seguin, member of the class of 1900. She quartered with Company E-2 in the Corps of Cadets, slept in whose bed she pleased and commanded the grid iron at football game halftimes. She added doggish excitement to yell practices, basketball games and other campus events. The Shetland Shepherd replaced a mongrel pup adopted by the Aggies in 1931. Part collie and part spitz, Rev I had free run of the campus until her death in 1944. Successor to the Aggies’ second mascot is Reveille III, an Alaskan- born collie pup that was gift of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Husa, Fair banks, last spring. The Husa’s twin sons, Randy and Steve Andes, made arrangements for the suc cessor concurrent with Rev IPs retirement announcement. $19,000 Gift Starts A&M’s Opportunity Awards Plan Cornelia Cooke Smith’s $19,000 led to a million dollar education support venture at Texas A&M. Mrs. Smith left the money to A&M in 1964, the first gift of its type in an Opportunity Awards program allowing needy students to get a college educa tion. Through other gifts, federal and state loan programs, the Stu dent Aid Office expects to assist Aggies with more than $1 mil lion in 1966-67. “We expect to have 750 stu dents getting $300,000 in schol arships beginning this fall,” an nounced Student Aid director Robert M. Logan. “Loan pro grams are expected to hit $450,- 000. Student labor provides an average work force of 1,450 a day, at an annual expenditure of $775,000.” Scholarship and loan funds are provided by numerous agencies and individuals. Long-term loans are available through the Texas Opportunity Plan, United Stu dent Air Fund Inc. and a federal ly guaranteed program to be an nounced. Yearly loans may be acquired through a Student Aid Fund set up by A&M’s Former Students Association. Student Aid made 6,000 loans of $20 each during 1965-66 from its “small loan fund.” “The unique thing about our $20 for 30 days loan program is that there are only four or five overdue,” Logan remarked. Scholarships averaging $300 a year and paying tuition, required fees and books are funded by Former Students, individuals and organizations. Mrs. Smith’s bequest was un usual in that she never worked at or visited A&M. Typical sup port that enables many Texas youths to study at A&M is given by the Effie and Wofford Cain Foundation, Houston Endow ments Inc., Former Students As sociation, Albert D. Banta Foun dation, Col. T. H. Barton, A&M’s national championship football team and mothers and A&M clubs across the state. “Scholarships are limited and in most cases earmarked for out standing scholastic achievement,” Logan said. Through scholarship or grants- in-aid for students showing aca demic promise, student employ ment and loan systems, almost any youth in the state, regard less of financial background, can get an education. Student employment pays an average $450, “enough to pay room and board,” Logan said. Average summer earnings for A&M students is $350. “If he can’t work summers, loans are available to fill the gap,” the student aid director went on. Interested students making satisfactory grades should con tact the Student Aid Office, 303 YMCA, for application informa tion.