Che Battalion Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1966 Number 346 Parking Situation Said Not Serious By JOHN FULLER Battalion Staff Writer Campus Security Chief Ed Powell said today many campus parking spaces are not being used and that the parking situation need not present any important problem. “Anyone with a maroon park ing sticker may park in any of the lots designated for students with 60 or more hours, or in the overflow lots,” he noted. Powell said the apparent over crowding of the junior-senior lots in the Duncan area could be cor rected if more people used the band dorm lot. “That area is for the use of anyone with 60 or more hours,” he pointed out. “The band has no right to keep other cars out of there. We’ve talked to the military leaders in that area and have it worked out.” HE EXPLAINED that the number of autos parked along the adjoining streets because of the full lot behind dormitory 5 was exceeded by the number of empty spaces in the band lot. “We first issued blue tickets, warning those drivers that they should be parking in the empty spaces near dormitory 11,” Powell said. “Later we began issuing the standard yellow tickets to the cars parked along the street.” Powell said students had parked along both sides of the street at some points. “This is dangerous because that’s a very narrow street,” he pointed out. “Rather than risk having someone killed or injured or having a car badly damaged because passing vehicles can’t maneuver safely, we’re trying to move these cars to the other lots.” POWELL SAID plans are being made to transfer freshman and sophomore vehicles from the lot along Highway 60 north of the cyclotron building to the large lot south of G. Rollie White Coli seum as soon as paving is com pleted there. Day student autos, plus those of employes of the Cyclotron In stitute and the Buildings and Uti lities Department, will be park ed in the former freshman-sopho more lot, he added. “We also hope to let day stu dents park in the lot by the cot tonseed laboratory, if it’s ever Argentine Program Contract Renewed Renewal of a contract between the State Department Agency for International Development and Texas A&M for economic devel opment in Argentina was an nounced today by President Earl Rudder. EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY Demonstration of SID AC (serial information dial access control) equipment by Harry Proudman of Chester Labo ratories was televised recently during- displays at Texas A&M. The closed circuit TV hookup was projected on a screen enabling- audiences of 250 to see demonstrations of small pieces of equipment. Video tape recordings were made of demonstrations. The $424,517 contract provides for technical advice and assist ance to the National Institute of Agricultural Technology of the Argentina government. The Department of Agricul tural Economics, through the College of Agriculture, has tech nical responsibility for further development of a national agri cultural economics service in the South American country. “Nine INTA staff members are registered in A&M’s gradu ate school and others will arrive for graduate study in 1967,” said Dr. Jack Grady, head of the Inter national Programs Office which handles contract administration. Three A&M agricultural econ omists have worked in Argentina since 1964. The new contract provides for eight economists to go to the country, four each in 1966 and 1967, he added. Argen tine students do graduate re search in their home environment under supervision of American graduate professors. In addition to training activi ties, technical advisory assistance will be given INTA in evaluat ing its agricultural economics re search program to include re search projects development, ad vising other agricultural agency administrators and special prob lems consultation. Dr. Tyrus R. Timm heads A&M’s Department of Agricul tural Economics and Sociology. Dr. John McNeely, department professor, leads international agricultural development. Dr. Vance Edmondson is party chief with headquarters in Buenos Aires and Clifton Bates, with the project in Argentina two years, will be campus coordinator. paved,” Powell noted. He points out that paving had been author ized some 17 months ago but that no action has been taken. “As for freshmen and sopho mores, we have more than enough parking spaces — or will have when the Coliseum lot is com pleted,” Powell continued. HE SAID THE new lot will have over 500 spaces. The Nava- sota and Hempstead lots hold 280 and 208 cars, respectively, and Powell said the number of vehicles owned by students with 59 or fewer hours was less than the total in the three areas. Powell explained that the fresh man-sophomore lot near the cyclo tron reserved for residents of Leg- get, Milner, Mitchell, Walton, and all the new and reconditioned dormitories except Henderson Hall, has space for 285 cars but only slightly more than 200 cars have been parked there lately. Powell said the lot to which the cars will be transferred was used for the first time at Satur day night’s football game, al though it is not yet paved. “THE ONLY TIME we’d have real trouble with that lot would be in case of a really heavy rain,” Powell noted. He added that day students may park facing west on Bizzell Street south of Lubbock Street in order to relieve the stress brought about by campus construction projects and an increase in the number of student automobiles. Powell said no figures are available yet concerning this year’s registration. “We’re still registering cars, and we just don’t have the staff to sort out and count up all the registrations this early,” he ex plained. Powell said it will probably be a few weeks before totals can be released. _ „ r Wjnm* PARKING CRUSH In one of the more cramped lots. Grad Enrollment Rises To 2120 Enrollment in the Graduate School now stands at 2,120 stu dents, according to Dr. R. W. Barzak, Associate Dean of Grad uate Studies. Dr. Barzak said this is an in crease of almost 300 over the enrollment of last fall, and it is a slight increase over the all- time high of last spring. He said although the draft has played a part in the high enrollment, it has not caused as much increase as had been ex pected. Hoss Volunteer Officers Named Corps Commandant Col. D. L. Baker released yesterday appoint ments and assignments of cadet officers and noncommissioned of ficers in the Ross Volunteer Com pany for 1966-67. Thomas C. Stone was named commanding officer and Robert A. Holcomb executive officer. Neal C. Ward was appointed ad ministrative officer and Robert Computer Orientation Meet Scheduled Here Tuesday Aggie Band Featured On Radio Show The Texas Aggie Band will be featured on the Kern Tips Sport Show on 14 state radio stations tomorrow. The five-minute show will car ry information and music by the nationally - famous organization which made its 1966 halftime de but Saturday in the A&M-Texas Tech game. Stations receivable in College Station carrying the program in clude KVET, Austin, 7:30 a.m.; WFAA, Dallas, 7:05 a.m.; WBAP, Fort Worth, 7:25 a.m.; KPRC, Houston, 6:55 a.m.; WOAI, San Antonio, 7:15 a.m., and KWTX, Waco, 7:25 a.m. A Computer Orientation Semi nar is scheduled Oct. 1-13 at Tex as A&M. Designed for the layman, the seminar sponsored by the Center for Computer Research in the Humanities will describe com puter operation and how com puters may be programmed to serve humanists. “A second aim is to acquaint people with computer terminology for the November conference on computers in humanistic re search,” center director Milton Huggett said. “Discussions will be quite elementary.” Huggett is coordinating the seminar, sched uled Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights in the Memorial Student Center. College of Liberal Arts mem bers and other interested persons are invited, he added. Gene Dippel, computer pro gramming languages instructor in the School of Business, is the principle speaker. He will dis cuss computer makeup, how it “thinks” and how people com municate with computers. His discussion will be sup ported by A&M faculty members with computer-oriented research projects in the humanities. Dr. H. O. Hartley, Institute of Statistics director, will speak on “Disputed Authorship of ‘The Federalist Papers’: The Mostel- ler-Wallace Statistical Study.” English graduate student James Pye will discuss “Decision-Mak ing in a Folklore Study.” “Communicating With a Com puter in Anglo-Saxon” is the topic of English professor R. V. Roach. A. Beene selected operations of ficer. Platoon leaders include John P. Tyson, John L. Willingham and William C. Haseloff Jr. Noncommissioned officers in clude Victor H. Schmidt, first ser geant; Gregory S. Carter, first platoon sergeant; Troy H. Myers, second platoon sergeant; Michael S. O’Hara, third platoon ser geant; Charles N. Robertson, sup ply sergeant, and Manzell L. Shafer, public information ser geant. William R. Hindman, Terry C. Aglietti and David J. Cruz are platoon guides. Squad leaders include Richard E. Burleson Jr., Gary W. Foster, Terrell S. Mullins, Arturo Esqui vel, Roy E. Massey, Michael M. Tower, Gerald A. Teel, Lawrence P. Heitman, Joseph D. Rehmet, Douglas V. Marshall, Donald E. Woods and Richard Kardys. Color guard members are Da vid A. Kocian, Wayne B. Fudge, Sammy W. Pearson, Hardol C. Schade III, Steven V. Gummer and Michael R. Walker. First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings cer tificates. —Adv. Old Days Gone Cadet Corps Not The By LOWELL JONES Battalion Special Writer The Corps is just not what it used to be. “When I was here, things were run in a strictly military fa shion,” says Bennie Zinn. Zinn enrolled at Texas A&M in September, 1922, and the life was anything but easy. Rising with the dawn, his outfit, Company B, Field Artillery, drilled for at least a half hour before break fast. If it was Thursday, they spent the entire morning after chow drilling. Since they were an artillery company, they used horses and French 75 MM howitzers on caissons. ALL CADETS were required to know not only the manual of arms, but how to disassemble, assemble, and clean every weapon they had. ROTC in those days was designed to train the cadet for every possible aspect of a field officer’s responsibilities. Finally noon would roll around every day just like it does now, and the cadets would march to lunch. “At the table,” said Zinn, “we ate just like we did at home. We didn’t have people asking us questions and making us sit up straight and stiff. For announce ments, we sat up with our hands in our laps. We were restricted on certain kinds of cush. For a year I didn’t have any pineapple or apricot pie. That was no great loss. I liked other kinds better anyway.” After lunch, there were classes that were just as tough on fish as they are now. Zinn was an engineering major his first year and he faced about the same courses that challenge the ma jority of today’s freshmen. IMMEDIATELY after evening chow there was a brief yell prac tice, held on the steps of the YMCA. The cadets went directly from yell practice to their quarters, where they hit the books. Each fish had an upperclassman as signed to help him with problem courses. “Cadets helped each other. Everybody looked out for the other guy,” Zinn said. On Sundays, everybody went to compulsory chapel. Later in the afternoon the band would march and play concerts at different spots on the campus for the enter tainment of the cadets and any one else who wanted to listen. “We didn’t get off campus much. At North Gate there was one drugstore and one grocery store. That was it. I was here four yars and I think I went to Bryan twice,” Zinn recalled. “WE DID GO home for Thanks giving and Christmas, but we were required to wear our uni Same form at all times, no matter where we were. It was good ad vertising for the college.” After four years which seemed terribly long then and all too short now, Zinn was graduated in 1926. He began his educational career teaching at Hearne. After three years there he went to Temple, where he taught high school and junior college. He held this position until 1940, when he went into the Army. He served honorably for five years, including four in World War II in the European theater. IN 1945 HE returned to the states and a position at Texas A&M College. He’s been here ever since. “If I were to give any advice or criticism,” said Zinn, “it would be that freshmen of today are required to do so many things that seem to be a waste of time. If all cadet units would really work towards good military lead ership and cooperation, the kind of esprit-de-corps and tradition you want will be developed and you won’t have any of this time wasting.” OLD ARMY In the days of the horse-drawn artillery.