Weather I Friday and Saturday — Partly cloudy with chance of few rainshowers in af ternoon. Wind Southeast 5-10 m.p.h. High 92, low 72. VOLUME 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1968 Number 588 New Aids Council County By JOHN McCARROLL Battalion Editor The Brazos Valley Community Council formed this week to bring together efforts of the many agencies created to cope with the growing human problems, Mrs. Felice Klein of the Brazos County Counseling Service, said. The Community Council has been organized to serve as a central clearing-house for prob lems, services and community programs. A similar effort was made earlier but was disbanded in 1953. The Council, working with all community organizations in part nership wth interested citizens, has as its purpose the encourage ment and orderly development of a balanced program of essential health, welfare, recreation and Summer Graduate Deadline Friday Friday is the last day to com plete procedures for qualifying as degree candidates for the first term of the summer session, Registrar H. L. Heaton has an nounced. All students, undergraduate and graduate, who expect to complete their degree requirement for the first summer session must com plete the procedures by 5 p.m. Those registered for the second term must meett he deadline at 5 p.m. on July 26. Registration fort he Graduate Record Examination is a required part of the filing procedure. This registration must be accomplished between 8 a.m., July 15, and 5 p.m., July 19, for the expected second summer session grduates. The prospective degree candi date must report to the Fiscal Office and pay the graduation fee of $5 for the GRE and $3 for the diploma. Graduate students pay only the diploma fee, the registrar pointed out. The candidate must then report to the Registrar’s Office to file his application for a degree and then register for the GRE at the Coun seling and Testing Center. Fees must be paid before attempting to register for the GRE. Graduate students must apply for degrees in both the Office of the Graduate Dean and the Regis trar’s Office. other community services, with the least amount of unnecessary duplication, Mrs. Klein pointed out. Most of he problems and serv ices in Bryan, College Sttaion and the remainder of the community can be divided into five general areas of interest, she said. These include economic problems of people who need food, shelter, clothing and other basic essentials of living and, who for some rea son, cannot provide them for themselves. Health services also need co ordination on the community level, along wtih counseling services, Mrs. Klein stressed. Recreation and formal and in formal education services will also receive close attention from the Brazos County Community Coun cil. At the second organizational meeting oft he council Tuesday, by-laws were adopted and a steer ing committee was appointed, along with a nominating commit tee to select officers. Chairman of the steering com mittee is Rev. William Oxley. Serving on this committee will be Mrs. David Falquist, Mrs. W. F. Hughes, Holly E. Rees, Mrs. Fannie Taylor, Earl Freeman, Mrs. Frank Chmelik, Anestacio Herrera and John B. Vittrup. The nominating committee is headed by Dr. Martin McBride. Also serving on this committee will be Andy Knegy, Mrs. Fannie Taylor, Mrs. Klein and Mrs. M. L. Parker. The non-tax supported, non profit organization was begun by Mrs. Klein, Knegy and John Birk- ner, director of the Brazos Valley Rehabilitation Center. The next meeting of the Brazos County Community Council will be on July 16 in the Blue Flame Room of the Lone Star Gas Com pany in Bryan. All interested individuals or representatives of service, civic or social groups are invited to attend and join the Council. First Dance Set Tuesday By Summer Directorate ‘THE SOUND INVESTMENT’ The first dance of the summer will feature a widely-known band from Houston at 8 p. m. in the Memorial Student Center Tuesday. ‘The Sound Investment’ has recorded “Come Back Baby” and others for release nationally. Mosquito Control Pushed In College Station Area Residents and officials of Col lege Station, joined by Texas A&M personnel, are putting the bite on the community’s mush rooming mosquito population. “We have two employes spray ing full-time in campus areas,” remarked O. O. Haugen, superin tendent of operations for A&M’s Physical Plant. “They spray every day when the sun shines.” The City of College Station is attacking low areas where excess Foreign Students Form New Society LEd. Wives’ Club Holds Game Night All wives of industrial educa tion majors are invited to the Monday night meeting of the In dustrial Education Wives Club at 8 p.m., Mrs. Judy Devlin, club re porter has announced. A get-acquainted game night will be in the Medallion Room of the Bryan Utilities Building, Mrs. Devlin said. BB&L Bryan Building & Loan Association, Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. —Adv. The newly - organized Inter national Student Society has an nounced two programs for the first six weeks of summer school at Texas A&M University. A watermelon party is planned at 7 p.m. June 28 and a variety show will be staged at 6:30 p.m. July 12. Both are set in Hensel Park. The variety show will feature performances by each country re presented in A&M’s student body, Rooh Partovi of Iran, Internation al Student Council president, said. “The society hopes to improve culture communicatiaons between foreign students,” said Partovi, who is working on a doctorate in petroleum engineering. “We also want to improve communications between foreign students and the community.” Membership forms may be ob tained at the YMCA offices. The society invites the public to join. The society was created, under sponsorship of Dr. Clinton Phil lips, business administration pro fessor. The governing body is the International Student Council which will serve all nationalities, Phillips emphasized. The council includes eight off icial representatives — one from each of the present foreign stu dent organizations and an Am erican representative. Regular membership in the society is open to all students. Associate memberships are avail able to interested persons. HIGHWAY 6 The famous Highway that is now almost legend at A&M is up for a name change by the College Station City Council (see story page 2). normal duties, but they shoul dered napsack spraying units to disperse naptha-type spray in pot-holes throughout the city. College Station City Manager Ran Boswell said Wednesday his office has received few com plaints about mosquitos in the past several days. Other contend the city’s phone must have been out of operation because giant-size mosquitos have caused unusual concern by parents and other residents of the community. Some suggested service clubs tackle the mosquito problems with their usual vigor for activi ties which are beneficial to every resident and visitor. Col. Dollar Heads Group To Houston A contingent of 40 representa tives of the Bryan-College Station Restaurant Association will attend the 29th Annual Convention of the Texas Restaurant Associa tion in Houston June 17-20th. Headed by Col. Fred W. Dollar, Food Service Director at Texas A&M, President of TRA’si Bryan- College Station Chapter, these delegates will join between 12,000 and 15,000 other restauranteurs an purveyors from Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, New Mexico and Okla homa at TRA’s Texas Southwest ern Regional Food Service Educa tional Convention at Houston’s new Exhibit and' Convention Center. “With 25 regular and 15 asso ciate members, plus wives and husbands of these members, we’re going to show Houston that the Bryan-College Station area is well represented,” Dollar said. The four-day Convention in cludes 306 Exhibits, a new record, as is the anticipated, attendance. It is by far the largest food serv ice trade show in the Southwest. Other officers of the Bryan- College Station Restaurant As sociation who will lead the dele gation are: 1st Vice President, Willie Kniec, Willie’s Steak House, Brenham; 2nd Vice President, Floyd Swanzy, Swanzy Cafeteria, Bryan; and Sec.-Treasurer, Sam Enloe, CC Cafeteria, Bryan. Local Directors are John Vitopil, Lone Star Gas Co., Bryan; and Mrs. Chris Norton, Coach Norton’s Pan cake House, College Station. State Director attending from this Chapter is Gus Ellis of the Dutch Kettle in Bryan. service with good results. “We are putting the trapped mosquitos into dry ice, at least minus 70 degrees centigrade,” McBride said. “Thursday or Friday, we will carry them to Houston where tests will be made to determine if the mosquitos carry encephalitis virus.” McBride observed different species of culex mosquitos — similar to the ones prevalent in College Station — carry enceph alitis and yellow fever viruses. They do not, he added, have the malaria virus. “Birds, particularly sparrows,” McBride pointed out, “are the biggest carriers of encephalitis. Epidemics usually start in July or August in this part of the country. We want to prevent the probability of an epidemic here.” Players and fans alike are suf fering mosquito maulings at Col lege Station baseball and softball parks. Some say it’s a blessing so many games have been washed out in the last couple of weeks. University and city employes are sticking with the rugged task of stamping out mosquito larvae, but voice concern about mos quitos already flying around, an noying and biting people. “I know they are spraying the creeks and bottomlands,” one man commented. “Sometimes, I think it’s too bad we don’t live in a creek so we could escape the mosquitos.” Skin Graft Needed By Burned Student A Texas A&M student who re ceived seccnd and third degree burns from spilled gasoline has been transferred to John Sealy Hospital at Galveston for special treatment. John P. Dickson of Santa Rosa, a senior management major, has been in St. Joseph’s Hospital, Bryan, since his accident May 22. The 27-year-old married student was burned on the hands and legs while attempting to prime an automobile carburetor. Dixon’s wife, who works in the A&M student apartments office, said doctors indicated her hus band’s injuries will require skin grafts. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Dixon, Santa Rosa, he has been working his way through A&M. The family is expecting its second child. Sound Investment Leads Off Series water concentrates to make good Others wondered why aerial breeding places for mosquitos. sprays have not been used in the Mayor D. A. (Andy) Anderson city, reported stepped up mosquito Dr. Martin McBride, city health fighting activities by city em- .committee chairman, said mos- ployes. Intermittent downpours quito cages suggested by Mayor kept street crews from their Anderson have been pressed into The first of a series of six dances will be at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the ballroom of the Memorial Student Center sponsored by the MSC Summer Directorate, Denny Kniery, dance chairman, has an nounced. “Love Street” is the theme of the psychedelic happening staged by the Sound Investment, form ally the Dimensions, from Hous ton. Good music, wild lights, and blue pillows are just a few of the attractions slated for the dance, Kniery points out. A light show is planned and psychedelic pictures will cover the walls in the same manner as a moving picture, ever changing and always different. The Sound Investment is known state-wide and has put out a re cent record called “Come Back Baby” on the Laurie label from New York. They have appeared on television in Dallas, Houston and San Antonio and also ap peared in stage shows in these cities. Dress is casual and the cost will be $1 per person. The Summer Directorate is di vided into four committees. They include the Dance, Recreation, Action and Publicity Committees. The president this summer is Ron Hinds. Vice-president in charge of operations is Kathy Cotropia, and vice-president of programs is Harry Snowdy. The dance committee is headed by Kniery. The function of this committee is to plan the dances Summer Semester Registration Up Texas A&M’s first - semester summer enrollment totaled, a re cord 5,385 students, announced Registrar H. L. Heaton. Total for the same period last year was 5,309. Heaton said main campus re gistration hit 4,980. The remain ing- 405 students included 166 at the Texas Adjunct at Junction, 211 at the Texas Maritime Ac ademy and 28 at the Marine Lab oratory, both at Galveston. The first semester of summer school concludes July 12, with second-semester registration be ginning July 15. for the summer and get them going. This includes getting a band, decorating the ballroom and getting refreshments, Hinds said. The recreation committee, head ed by John Bendele, sponsors the talent shows and is planning a barbecue or watermelon feast at the Grove. The action committee is just that. This committee will organ ize sports tournaments and trips to the HemisFair and the Astro dome. Anyone having a special talent should come by the Student Pro grams office in the MSC, so that they may participate in a talent show, Hinds said.. Jack Abbott headst his committee during the summer. The publicity committee is headed by Clair Adams. Students Ready For Sea Cruise Texas A&M “Summer School at Sea” participants will report to the Texas Maritime Academy at Galveston this week for three- day operation in preparation for their European cruise. Adm. James D. Craik, TMA superintendent, said the two- month program this year has at tracted a record 112 spring high school graduates and college freshmen. The students cast off Saturday for the 13,000-mile jaunt aboard the “Texas Clipper,’ a large oceanliner converted to a floating classroom. “Summer School at Sea” stu dents will be joined by 124 TMA cadets participating in their an nual summer training. Ports of call in Europe are Oslo, Norway; Amsterdam, Neth erlands; Lisbon, Portugal, and Gibraltar. The ship will visit New York enroute and return via the Canary Islands and San Juan, Puerto Rico.. “Summer School at Sea” partic ipants have the opportunity to earn six hours of college credit in English, history or mathe matics. The program is jointly sponsor ed by A&M’s College of Liberal Arts and TMA, also a division of the university. Can Machines Ever Replace Teachers? “Any teacher who can be re placed by a machine should be.” Education is moving from “teaching as telling to teaching as guiding,” Dr. Ole Sand of the National Education Association said here this weekend. The NEA’s Center for the Study of Instruction director discussed schools as educational enterprises rather than stations for pumping information into students at the annual Texas School Administra tors Conference. “We are moving from group to individual education,” Sand said in his inquiry, in which the school is not for information dis semination but for argument.” “Covering content was difficult in the old one-room schoolhouse, the former public school teacher and Wayne State University ed ucation professor told 700 con ference participants. “Knowledge doubled from 1750 to 1900, 1900 to 1950 and 1950 to 1960.” Technology is presently pro viding the means of releasing teachers from a strict presenta tion of fact to discussion of the information in seminar-type class es, he said. The three-day A&M conference will investigate new educational technology in use in Texas, spot lighting means Sand discussed of “raising the teacher to a higher point of professionalism.’ Innovative programs under study of conference demonstra tion groups include television teaching strategies, cooperative teaching, elementary physical fit ness, staff development and driv ers education, among others. James L. Olivero, assistant sec retary of the NEA’s National Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards, will look futher into innovative pro gram developments in a Tuesday general assembly address, “It’s Happening Now.” Texas school superintendents, administrators and instructional supervisors will have a smorgas bord Monday evening. Demonstra tions, discussion and presenta tions will continue through Wednesday. The conference is sponsored by the Texas Association of County Superintendents, Texas School Administrators Association, Texas Association of Instructional Supervisors and A&M’s Educa tion Department. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M. —Adv. - -.wr.::;<$■ • ...