?/*s ies i «d win i en Past I red Playei, a more this weti e > ’ he coir. is Piayit, d 4th qiu, ^ Sat elica sht for this season, Purdue it ts said I 5 didn't 4 Sainst Silt s to the it- :perience t| ch also eatij e sting fatt. Bob Lot; four pa® >f them pointed m 0 reception 'ass intenit id the otle Stegent. i n the times. •NED ak pie passii| allings sai 1 planned! :ack. He m m would all against 11 1 Tigers o a little li i. But mayli ot of ones last week Che Battalion :£ Friday — Clear, winds westerly 5-10 m.p.h. High 78, low 51. :£ £: Saturday — Clear to partly cloudy, winds southerly 10-15 m.p.h. High 81, £: :|:j low 54. Baton Rouge — Partly cloudy, winds +' : I:-: northwest 5-10 m.p.h. Temperature at i:-: game time 78. vi VOLUME 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1967 Number 476 Dollar Lists Changes In Dining Hall Setup By DAVE MAYES A revised board policy, thou sands of dollars’ worth of new equipment and a different serving £ YOU? mtage low. r hope you dish all of ill visit us i 7 days a iur friends our center 10 snooker ables, 9 of r sensation Iso have a I. d help po* done! enter /[aster Vitek *4 'LM M . HERE’S HOW Junior yell leader Bob Segner leads candidates for the fish yell leader positions at tryouts in the Grove Wednesday afternoon. The new fish yell leaders will assume their duties for the first fish game, against the TCU Pollywogs Oct. 5. President Johnson To View Flood-Ravaged South Texas By GARY GARRISON Associated Press Writer HARLINGEN, Tex. AP - President Johnson said Wednes day he will fly to Texas for a first-hand look at flood and hur ricane ravaged South Texas and the Lower Rio Grande Valley. Teacher Exam Slated Feb. 3 All seniors preparing to teach school must take the National Teacher Examinations, to be ad ministered at A&M Feb. 3, April 6, and July 6, 1968, according to Auston Kerley, testing director. Results of the National Teacher Examinations are used in the selection of new teachers and in the certification or licensing of teachers. Prospective teachers should contact the Counseling and Test ing Center for advice concerning these examinations and the dates they should be taken, Kerley said. The Bulletin of Information for Candidates, distributed by Educa tional Testing Service, should be picked up at the Counseling and Testing Office between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. before Oct. 20, he added. The last date for filing for degrees and registering for the test is Oct. 9. The President made his an nouncement as the waterlogged miserable victims faced at least another week of danger from de luges dumped by Hurricane Beu lah. The President was expected to pick up Gov. John Connally at Austin before flying over the de vastated area, whipped by Beu lah’s 160-mile-an-hour winds, high tides, deluges and floods. A White House announcement earlier said Johnson also would name former Texas Gov. Price Daniel as head of the Office of Emergency Planning, vacated by the resignation Wednesday o f Farris Bryant, former Florida chief executive. The OEP han dles federal aid for stricken are as asked by Connally for the dis aster area. Beulah dumped downpours of up to 30 inches in the Rio Gran de watershed. A flood diversion dam over the Arroyo Colorado broke here Sunday and was fol lowed by the break on a smaller dam upstream. That started disastrous flood ing which has inundated much of this city of 41,000, including the downtown section and areas of the town’s finest homes, about 800 in all. Late Wednesday, water in the Arroyo Colorado was holding steady at 44.20 feet, the first time its rise had stopped since the dams broke. Damage and misery, however, still was too widespread to as sess. Airplane Crashes In Flames Into Dallas Area Schoolroom Jackson Appointed Class Yice-Prexy Nokomis Jackson Jr., a chemis try major from Midland, has been named vice president of the sophomore class at Texas A&M. The appointment was made by the Student Senate after the student elected to the post last spring failed to register for the fall term. Jackson is a cadet in A&M’s Air Force R.O.T.C. pro gram. His parents live at 308 E. Nobles, Midland. University National Bank "On the side of Texas A&M” —Adv. DALLAS <7P) — A company courier plane crashed in flames into an empty schoolroom Wed nesday 50 feet from a faculty meeting, killing the pilot, five Delaware Air Force men, and at least one other civilian. The pilot, civilian Verner Den man Jr., 45, of Greenville, Tex., was cast in the hero’s role by one of the students spared in the crash and by a fire official who said Denman apparently nosed down to save lives. Highland Park Police Chief W. H. Naylor said the total number of victims was not absolutely def inite because the bodies in the wreckage were so torn. The hu man remains were carried out in nine body-size plastic bags. Just 20 minutes before the Ling - Temco - Vought Electro systems plane hit Bradfield Ele mentary School, all pupils had been dismissed early for the teachers’ meeting. Ordinarily, hundreds of children would have been inside. Dallas County Fire Marshal Hal Hood said he believed Denman “realized he was in trouble and just did a great job of bringing it down. “It could have been much worse if he had hit some of these houses here, or the middle of the school. I think he knew he was going to die and said ‘well, let’s end it the best way.’ ” Denman was the father of two children. E. W. ANDERSON Anderson To Talk At Church Confab Members of the 22nd annual Town and Country Church Con ference Oct. 12-13 at Texas A&M will hear a widely known ed ucational psychologist discuss “Who’s Confused.” The speaker is Dr. Ernest W. Anderson, professor of agricul tural extension, University of Illinois. Anderson has broad experience as a communication and educa tional consultant with govern ment and industry. His presenta tion will kick-off the conference which has its theme, “Communi cating- the Gospel to a Confused Culture,” according to Dr. Bar din H. Nelson, A&M professor of sociology and program confer ence chairman. The conference is sponsored by the Texas Agricultural Exten sion Service and the Texas Agri cultural Experiment Station, and is conducted by the A&M Agri cultural Economics and Sociology Department. Nelson said more than 200 ministers and lay leaders from throughout the state are expec ted to attend the non-denomina- tional meetings. SCONA XIII Chairman Names Three New Committee Heads Three committee chairmen for the 13th Student Conference on National Affairs at Texas A&M University have been appointed by chairman Pat Rehmet. They are James A. Lehmann Jr. of Bellaire, host; John Fuller of San Angelo, publications; and James Wilbanks of Hot Springs, Ark., arrangements. Theme of the Dec. 6-9 confer ence, “The Price of Peace in Southeast Asia,” will be discussed by university delegates from the IP- * ^ l ,.-w. OUT WITH THE OLD Corps freshmen carry old chairs out of Dormitory 3 to make room for the new, upholstered chairs in the background. More than 200 new chairs were placed in dormitory rooms as improvements continued in the Duncan Area dorms. New desks are also being added to the dorms, which were air-conditioned and repainted during the summer. United States, Canada and Mex ico. SCONA delegates and speakers will probe the Southeast Asia conflict, economic prospects, so cial progress and prospects for political stability and peace. Lehmann, a senior finance maj or, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Lehmann, 4601 Beech, Bellaire. He is a major in the Army ROTC, administrative of ficer of the Ross Volunteers, member of the Student Senate and Cadet Court and ranks as a distinguished student and distin guished military student. Fuller, a junior journalism major, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Fuller, 2753 Dena Drive, San Angelo. He is managing edi tor of The Battalion and vice president of the A&M Press Club. He also is scholastic sergeant of the Second Wing, Air Force ROTC, a distinguished student, member of Sigma Delta Chi jour nalism fraternity and the A&M Memorial Student Center Town Hall Committee. He has an Air Force scholarship. Wilbanks, a junior history major, is the son of Mrs. James E. Wilbanks, Rt. 3, Hot Springs. Sergeant-major of the Third Bat talion, Army ROTC, Wilbanks is programs vice president for the Memorial Student Center, mem ber of the MSC Town Hall and Leadership committees and A&M coordinator for the Association of College Unions. He holds an Army scholarship. Bryan Building & Loan Association, Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. —Adv. method are only a few of the changes that have been made in the A&M dining system, Col. Fred W. Dollar, director of food serv ices, said Wednesday. “The changes were necessary,” Dollar explained, “in order to better accommodate the nearly 6,000 Aggies we serve at each meal.” The proposal to make a seven- or five-day board plan optional to A&M students was originally submitted to the board of direc tors by a special student commit tee composed of Lewis G. Venator, president of the Civilian Student Council; Lonnie Minze, Cadet Corps commander; Bob Collins, representing Ernie Knowles, pres ident of the Graduate Student Council; and Clarence Daughei-ty, representing Jerry Campbell, president of the Student Senate. “LATEST FIGURES show that 18 per cent of the over 6,000 board-paying students have sub scribed to the five-day plan. Only one of six students in this minor ity is a member of the Corps. Of course, these figures are by no means complete due to so many late registrations,” Dollar added. A shortage of waiters at Dun can Hall has caused the new semi-cafeteria style to be imposed during the noon meal. Although Dollar saw no way to alter the three-formation plan caused by the scheduling of many classes at noon, he said he did hope that the Corps could have the option of eating the noon meal family- style, as soon as enough waiters could be recruited to adequately staff the operation. NEW EQUIPMENT added to Sbisa dining hall over the sum mer months included a complete cafeteria line, a set of glass doors, six grills, three ovens and a wall of glass dual temperature bins, probably the first installed any where in the United States, es- Baton Rouge Trip Receives OK From Weatherman Texas A&M students and area football followers planning to drive to Baton Rouge this week end should have good driving con ditions, according to the univer sity weather station. Manager Jim Lightfoot said clear, cool weather from the front that passed through Wednesday should hold into the weekend, when A&M engages Louisiana State in Baton Rouge. The forecast is clear to partly cloudy here, clear in the Baton Rouge area with an expected tem perature of 78 at the 7:30 p.m. kickoff Saturday. The forecast picture contains no precipitation. Temperatures Thursday and Friday are expected to range from 50 to the low 70s. A gradual warming will begin Saturday, Lightfoot added. pecially designed to keep food hot or cold before being served. This and other equipment cost the food services department over $75,000, Dollar noted. A menu committee composed of student leaders will meet with members of the food services staff each month to discuss pos sible additions to the menu and to air student grievances. Each member of the committee may invite up to six students to come as their guests to each meeting. This year’s permanent members of the committee are Venator; Knowles; George Walne, vice president of the Civilian Student Council; Steven Bancroft, presi dent, Dormitory 15, and Mike Plake, president, Law Hall. “WE WOULD all like to have the very best food at the lowest possible prices, but sometimes the cogs do not always stretch. The only money we get comes from Salvation Army Helps Evacuees In Valley Area The state commander of The Salvation Army in Texas says over 150,000 individuals have re ceived aid from its mass emergen cy relief program in the Hurri cane Beulah disaster. Lt. Col. Paul Thronburg, back at his Dallas headquarters from the Rio Grande Valley, said The Salvation Army has spent over $100,000 in the flodd stricken areas of South Texas from Coi'- pus Christi to Rio Grande City. The divisional commander said 20 canteens and 14 field kitchens served more than 200,000 meals at schools, churches and civic buildings in 30 cities and towns. Food and clothing amounting to 213 tons was shipped to South Texas in 51 truckloads from The Salvation Army Processing Cen ter at San Antonio. “Our forces will remain in the Valley until the emergency ends,” Thronburg said. “So far we have had up to 155 officers and per sonnel and 5,00 volunteers en gaged in bringing relief to dis aster victims. the board fee each student pays. We get no money from any state or government sources,” Dollar reminded. “As a result, board fees will probably increase to keep pace with the upward trend in wages. We hope to eliminate the need for busboys by installing a con veyer belt system sometime next year,” Dollar concluded. $62,500 Fund Honors Greer A civil engineering endowment fund totaling more than $62,500 has been established at Texas A&M in honor of State Highway Engineer Dewitt C. Greer. The fund, announced at a High way Department golden anniver sary dinner in Austin Tuesday night, was raised by statewide public subscription. Proceeds from the endowment will be used to provide under graduate scholarships for civil engineering students interested in careers as highway engineers. Presentation of the check to Greer was made by former Gov ernor Allan Shivers and highway contractor L. P. (Pete) Gilvin of Amarillo. In passing the check to A&M President Earl Rudder, Greer said: “Although the endowment will bear my name and will bring—I hope, a great challenge to my alma mater—the great works at tributed to me are in reality the achievements of the faithful, un stinting labor and integrity of the thousands of Texas Highway Department employees through the years.” Greer, who has been associated with the THD more than 40 years and directed it the past 27 years, is a 1923 graduate of Texas A&M. The university named him a distinguished alumnus last year. 4th Group Sets DS Ceremonies Members of the Fourth Group, Air Force ROTC, who were desig nated Distinguished Students dur ing the spring semester, will re ceive DS ribbons in ceremonies today at 5:15 p.m. Fourth Group Scholastic Offi cer Eddie Travis said the students will be given the ribbons in a formation of squadrons in the group on the main parade ground, north of the Memorial Student Center. This is the first such ceremony in Corps history, Travis noted. Painting Exhibit Begins In MSC A 20-painting exhibit by the Texas Fine Arts Association is on display at the Texas A&M Memorial Student Center, an nounced Mrs. Ann Keel, social director. The juried fall show includes oils, acrylics, water colors, char coal and carbon, and casein work. Among contributors are artists from McAllen, Corpus Christi, Cuero, Austin, Castroville, San Antonio, Fort Worth, Beaumont, and Kingsville. Mrs. Keel said the art exhibit will be displayed through Oct. 6. First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings certif icates. —Adv. • FISH DRILL TEAM TRYOUTS The Fish Drill Team has been holding- tryouts on the parking lot east of Duncan Dining Hall. Additional tryouts will be held Friday and Monday, according to Jim Yogas, senior advisor from Galveston. Interested Corps freshmen, regardless of previous experience, should report at 5:15 p. m., Yogas said.