inty Meet govermrwnt d a Civil D e . - las s at Texas' nnounced Dr chief in. gineering Ex. rants for tht. directors anj- two mayors. ‘ ity manager! I county offt d by Bodiin, illiam C. Ti£ the Memarii ial Room. course is to >rs a broat otal activities efense open, aid. lave respond of an eraer- know hoWh 'ederal assist- >ie,” he addei Junction Gives CS Western Touch Jubilee Junction, a town within a town, officially came into be ing last Saturday, complete with gunfights between ornery look ing cowboys, bustle-wearing gen teel ladies and stage coaches. More than 2,000 residents of the Bryan-College Station area visited the authentic western town in College Station during its opening day. The town boasts twenty-one structures and a whole passle of displays. Birds and other crit ters from throughout the coun try are displayed in glass classes. Marion Pugh, founder of Jubi lee Junction and Famed Injun fighter, had planned to have the town ready by July 1 but it isn’t everyday you start a town from scratch. The town was six months in construction. Jubilee Junction has its own funeral parlor complete with cof- fin on display. The post office has wrought iron rails and glass letterboxes, and postcards can be bought and mailed there because the pony express leaves the of fice every evening. There is a tradin’ post where the ladies can buy antiques, a barber shop where you can take a hot bath for 35^, and the First National Bank which has an old window once used by cowboys to cash their monthly checks. If you get a hankerin’ for some thing to wash the dust of the street out of your throat, there’s the Long Drink Saloon and after a hard day in the saddle you can fill up at the Country Kitchen and then bed down at the Junc tion House. Other buildings and displays to be viewed by visitors are the Tax and Assay Office, Anderson Company, the building manned by people from the Chamber of Commerce and Texas A&M who pass out literature on the area and the school. As far as livestock are con cerned there are pheasants and quail, a jersey calf and white kid that can be petted by visitors. All of the artifacts in the town were gathered by Pugh during the six months of construction. Some were donated by people who heard about the project. The signs and other bits of humor throughout the town were composed by the work force of artists Pugh employed. Indus trial arts and architecture majors and graduates from A&M spent much time in the preparation of the entertainment center. The Longhorn Steer in the saloon is a vivid example. iiSp RI6HT3 RESEM& INDOOR PLUMBING, TOO The Junction House Hotel, the best little ole hotel west of the Trinity, complete with in door plumbing and genuine com shuck matresses. SsTlLAJUiX ***'’■• » • '-j. -- -n--|iiirr ii I-*,™.-' -V • . —i . - ' it- : ' ■ ' TAKE A RIDE The daily stagecoach west leaves from in front of the saloon, because everyone knows where the saloon is at Jubilee Junction. HOC Mock Trial Highlights Educational Seminar 3031 A mock condemnation trial actually held in the Harris Coun ty 55th District Court will high light a three-day Right of Way Educational Seminar under way at Texas A&M. Two hundred participants at the fifth seminar are from Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas and New Mexico, states in Region 2 of the American Right of Way Association. The Honorable W. Sears Mc Gee, 55th District Court judge; Charles F. iMitchell, assistant county attorney, and Robert L. Burns of Sears and Bums, of Houston, will stage the actual case heard in Houston. “The same people who partici- pate