“O' ^ Mexi a tonj* battle with | y% attle 1 (ii>) ~ The e of UCLAhal ^Icindor i s , cst believed ty he may % ime with Hotj ^ nation’s tt lda y the 7-foe; suffering inipaired via the Jules Sit the campus (i i-tion. Cbe Battalion S; *: S: Friday — Cloudy, occasional light :•> rain, wind North, 10-15 m.p.h. High j:|: 48, low 38. Sj jj :$ Saturday — Cloudy to partly cloudy, x- winds Northerly, 10-20 m.p.h. High :$ jj:: 52, low 36. | VOLUME 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1968 Number 526 JATE ;nts leir portrai 1968 Aggie, a Jan. 31, 1 be made a dio. . Ties) NER ays Win wdown ou Get ds Done t PUS NERS To Receive Degrees Ceremonies Saturday Commissions Set For 88 Cadets i,Wi FIRST 100-MILERS Joan and Ernest Uken made their running' in the Texas A&M 100-Mile Club a family project. The nuclear physicist and former “Miss South Africa” received a certificate for jogging 100 miles. Physical conditioning is the club’s purpose. Researcher, Wife First 4 100-Miters’ A nuclear physicist and a 1966 “Miss World” finalist were the first 100-Mile Club members at Texas A&M to run 100 miles. The husband-wife team, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Uken of Jo hannesburg, South Africa, "raced” about 90 other 100-mile aspirants to reach the 1’unning goal. Dr. Carl W. Landiss, head of the Health and Physical Educa tion Department which sponsors the club, presented the Ukens 100-mile certificates. “We ran about three miles a day and 15 to 20 miles a week,” explained Uken, head of a neu tron activation lab at the South Africa National Institute for Metallurgy. He is on leave of absence from the branch of South Africa’s Atomic Energy Board to participate in research with Dr. Radar Installation To Aid City Police College Station police have in stalled radar to cope with poten tial speeders. The radar will have a range of 1500 feet on cars and 4,000 feet on trucks and buses, and will be operated on all major streets in side the city limits. BB& L]_ Bryan Building & Loan Association, Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. —Adv. Richard E. Wainerdi in A&M’s Activation Analysis Research Laboratory. His wife is the former Miss Joan Carter, “Miss South Africa” of 1966. The striking blond beau ty was one of 15 finalists in the Miss World contest at London in November, 1966. They ran the 100 miles on country roads near their South College Station apartment, sprinting to the club goal in about three months. “We didn’t run every week,” Uken remarked. “Last week, we missed the ice and cold while making a trip to California.” The slender scientist, a South African Army captain, and his wife plan to keep on running, even when they return to Johan nesburg in late February. “The idea is that a club mem ber should have established a physical conditioning routine of running by the time he has com pleted 100 miles,” explained Dr. John M. Chevrette, assistant pro fessor of health and physical edu cation. “We hope he’ll still be running some each day when the club is forgotten,” Dr. Chevrette added. Tie said persons interested in becoming 100-Mile Club members should contact him at Room 221, G. R. White Coliseum, to have their name placed on mileage charts. There are , no dues, meetings or obligations. Just running. A record 817 students are scheduled to receive degrees dur ing graduation ceremonies at 10 a.m. Saturday in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Commissioning exercises at 1:S0 p.m. Saturday will feature Gen. James K. Woolnough, com manding officer of the U. S. Continental Army Command at Fort Monroe, Va., as major speaker. Eighty-eight cadets are sched uled to be commissioned second lieutenants, with 61 going into the Army, 21 Air Force and six Marine Corps. The commissioner of the Texas College and University Board, Dr. Jack K. Williams, will be com mencement speaker. Dr. Williams, top administrative officer for the coordinating board since August, 1966, is a former president of the Council of Aca demic Vice Presidents of South ern Universities and served two terms as a member of the execu tive council for the Southern As sociation of Colleges and School’s Commission on Colleges. BEFORE MOVING to Texas, Dr. Williams served Clemson Uni versity for almost 20 years, first as a history professor, then as graduate dean and dean of the university until he was named vice president in 1963. The Galax, Va., native earned the Ph.D. and two additional de grees in political science from Emory University. He also did graduate study at the University of Virginia and the University of Kentucky. The former Marine Corps of ficer is the author of several magazine and journal articles on historical subjects. He is a mem ber of the Methodist Church, Phi Kappa Phi National Scholarship Society and various historical as sociations. In 1965, Williams was secretary of the Governor’s Committee to recommend a system of junior colleges for South Carolina. He organized junior colleges in Sum ter and Greenville, S. C. GENERAL WOOLNOUGH, a 1932 graduate of the U. S. Mili tary Academy at West Point, is a former deputy chief of staff for personnel for the Department of the Army. The general also commanded the 1st Cavalry Division in Ko- BATT SCHEDULE This is the last issue of the Battalion during Dead Week. Next Thursday’s edition will be the only issue during Finals Week. rea. During World War II, Wool nough was executive officer of the 1st Infantry Division shortly after the D-Day Normandy Beach landing in 1944 and assumed com mand of the 393rd Infantry Regi ment, 99th Infantry Division, near the end of the Battle of the Bulge in 1945. Among General Woolnough’s citations are the Distinguished Service Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Silver and Bronze Stars, and commendations from Belgium, France and the Republic of Korea. A&M BOARD President L. F. Peterson of Fort Worth will ex tend greetings to the graduates, as will A&M President Earl Rud der who also will introduce Dr. Williams and preside over con ferring of degrees. Clarence Daugherty, Corps chaplain, will deliver the invo cation and David Wilks, civilian chaplain, the benediction. Special stage guests include board member Peyton McKnight of Tyler, two former A&M chan cellors, Dr. M. T. Harrington and Gibb Gilchrist, and a former act ing president, D. W. Williams. Robert L. Boone, director of the Singing Cadets, will lead the graduates and audience in singing the “Spirit of Aggieland.” R. L. Hostetler will be organist. The “swearing in” ceremonies for Saturday afternoon’s commis sioning program will be directed by Maj. George Strebeck of the A&M commandant’s office. .... . SPHERE DEDICATION SET Diann Beene, a secretary in the Olin E. Teague Research Center, looks over the eight- foot-high sculptured sphere in front of the center. The sphere, presented by Albritton Engineering Corp. and Reynolds Metals Co., will be dedicated Wednesday. See story, page 4. $100,000 Grant From NASA To Aid A&M Space Research Night Watchman, 61, Dies On Duty At Sbisa Docks Henry S. Holleman, night watchman for Texas A&M’s Food Service Department, died about 6 a.m. Thursday of an apparent heart attack while on duty on the loading docks at Sbisa Dining Hall. Mr. Holleman, 61, has been as sociated with the university more than 21 years. He resided on cam pus. The World War II veteran was a native of Normangee but resided in Fort Worth immediately be fore coming to College Station. Services are pending at Calla way-Jones Funeral Home. Survivors include three brothers and a sister. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M” —Adv. Texas A&M has received a $100,000 grant from the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis tration for continuing its pro gram of space-related research. The program, begun in 1962, has produced a wide range of in vestigations and findings which have contributed to this nation’s space effort, points out Harry Whitmore, director of A&M’s Space Technology Division. NASA funds have been used to form research project teams com posed of scientists of different disciplines so that problems could be attacked from a number of angles. The funding has acted as a “pump primer” in that the proj ects, once begun, have attracted quite a bit of additional support. “ACTUALLY, we’re running between $400,000 and $500,000 a year in things associated with the grant and with the Teague Re search Center,” says Whitmore. The grant aided in establishing the center. The original grant of $100,000 for three years in 1962 was large ly a result of the work Dr. John Calhoun, vice president for pro grams. It was raised in 1964 to $100,000 a year. The total, to date, is $681,000 notes Whitmore. The payoffs have been in terms of new knowledge and devices. Currently, a new method of computerized mathematical analysis worked out by A&M’s space scientists is being used to study the new design of the Apol lo Program’s command module. In fact, a broad effort in struc tural analysis which can be ap plied not only to spacecraft, but also to a variety of things, is underway at A&M. SPACECRAFT cost studies at A&M have continued to NASA’s program of estimating costs at the Manned Spacecraft Center at Houston. This week, A&M’s Activation Analysis Laboratory in the Teague Center began work on analyzing titanium, a strong, light metal used in spacecraft design. Work at the center continues on methods of accelerating small particles to very high speeds so that the effect of meteroid im pact on spacecraft can be deter mined. An investigation of the me chanical properties of solid rock et propellants occupies another interdisciplinary team. One payoff has been A&M’s production of realistic air gust effects on a prototype scale. This, says Whitmore, applies both to aircraft and to missiles resting on launch pads. Full-scale tests in the university’s large wind tun nel may be in the offing. INTERESTING data has come from a program of analyzing pro pellers. This applies directly to the intense government and in dustry developmental work in vertical take-off and landing air craft. The grant has contributed to the carrying out of some other projects in basic science. Texas A&M and the Southwest Center for Advanced Studies near Dallas are collaborating in the fabrication of huge “rocking chair” detector telescopes which will help study cosmic ray parti cle products called muons. A de tector similar to one on the A&M campus is to be placed in a tun nel in the Alps. Also being studied at A&M are the possibilities of using extreme ly low temperatures to orient the nuclei, or cores, of atoms. Research with plasmas, ex tremely hot gases, continues un der the program. First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings certif icates. —Adv. CoUegian Comment li trade- in used Council Nixes Clothing Regulations: What’s Your Opinion? Tomnvy Uoosier, Freshman from Bryan: “1 don’t believe in the school being able to tell a student what to wear. . . It has to come from the person himself at this late date.” mms . Tom Curl Sophomore journalism major: “1 don’t like extremes in appear ance, but 1 also don’t like rules that tell me how I have to dress. College students should be ma ture enough to dress properly without being ordered to.” Jane Mills, Freshman journalism major from Bryan: “It is my opinion that it is each individual person’s business what he wears. But I agree that there should be basic rules.” Jerry Gentry Freshman arctitecture major from San Antonio: “I am against the clothing regulation and sup port the council’s action. A uni versity is a place to express yourself and your clothing is one form of that expression.” Bob Hal« Junior chemical engineering ma jor: “The action was at least good in that it should bring the issue of clothing regulations to a head ... I do think that stu dents should give the administra tion some idea of the views of the majority through an elec tion.” HP Richard Simpson Sophomore civil engineering major from Bastrop: “There should be no clothing regula tions unless the clothing worn by many becomes obnoxious to the majority. No one should tell another what to wear un less the wearing of shabby clothing gets out of hand.” Don Winkler Junior mechanical engineering major from Houston: “I feel that dressing habits on campus are definitely related to A&M’s image and if students do not take it upon themselves to dress neatly, some regulation is needed.”