- v. ■'u. v ' ; • • ' . ' • . *. *• - - - • ' ‘ R Win wn fe.t lane IS IRS LIBRARY CAMPUS ••• : L -- • :. : ar HHRHBI Bsttdlioti VOLUME 64, Number 39 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1968 Telephone 845-2226 ) get ttif it takesls ing respo: e plannin; ed up. & urity yoB w for it- insuranci expand ai earlier yoi :s, andtti II have! >r stopli) talk ate ,—pool f ■writei -3165 ENT m UR HILADELPHI' mes. .;Xv! Bonfiremen On 5-Day Plan Will Get Weekend Meals i § By DAVID MIDDLEBROOKE Battalion Staff Writer Students on the 5-day board plan who identify themselves as working on the Bonfire will be allowed to eat in the dining halls Saturday and Sunday, announced yell leader and Bonfire Commit tee adviser Malon Southerland. Southerland stressed that the student must be working on the Bonfire to be allowed this priv ilege. He also noted that all students should have their iden tification cards on their person at all times while working. FOOD SERVICES will furnish coffee and cookies during the night while the stack is being guarded. The service will be handled by the YMCA, with the help of several campus women’s ★ ★ ★ Bonfire Pole Is Raised By Company D-l Company D-l cadets raised Monday the first flammable material toward the Bonfire. “Spider D,” commanded by Walter D. Dabney of Dallas, tra ditionally raises the Bonfire center pole. Several thousand logs will be leaned and stacked against the 93-foot long shaft before the first is burned Tues day. Four other poles also were em bedded in the Duncan area drill field by D-l, to support lights for night work. Additional prelimi nary work to stacking included ditching and burying electrical conduit to the lights and a one- inch pipeline for fueling the in terior of the stack. Head yell leader Bill Youngkin of Gilmer said Bonfire work the majority of this week will be con centrated in the cutting area north of Bryan. Careful place ment of interior logs will be car ried out before stacking speeds up Saturday. The Bonfire Yell Practice will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday. groups, including the Aggie Wives’ Club. Safety was also stressed by Southerland. He noted that safe ty meetings for freshmen and sophomores, both civilian and cadet, will be held Thursday eve ning in the Grove. The exact time and place, he continued, will be announced in the mess halls. “IN THE CUTTING area, everything is set and ready to go,” said Southerland. “We have one request to make, however. “The only entrance to the cut ting area is a road running off of a farm and market road. Those working in the cutting area may park anywhere along the farm road. We do ask, though, that people enter only through the gate, and do not climb over the fence. “THE POINT is not to tear things up.” The cutting area this year is in the same area as last year’s. To reach it, students should go 12 miles north on Highway 6 to the Old San Antonio Road. They should turn left on OSR and con tinue to Benchley, then make another left turn. After cross ing the railroad tracks, another left should be made. The cut ting area will be on the driver’s left. THE TRUCKS will use a dif ferent route, noted Youngkin. They will go west on FM 60, then cut over another farm road to Highway 21. They will head back east on 21 to FM 1093, % mile before the 21-6 intersection. Trucks will travel 1093 to OSR, then right two miles to the cut ting area. “Collections so far for the lease purchase amount to $4,” said Memorial Student Center assistant cashier Jo Scanlin, “mostly from the office staff here. We have heard, however, that student contributions are being collected and will be turned in soon.” “COLLECTIONS are going fine from what I hear,” Young kin said, “and I hope it continues. The need has been announced in the mess halls today, and printed in The Battalion. I urge all those who love the Bonfire to help.” Southerland also noted that volunteer help is needed Thurs day and Friday in the cutting area. Any Junior or Senior who does not have afternoon classes may work, according to Dean of Students James P. Hannigan. “The owner of the land being used for the cutting has placed only one restriction on our use of it, concluded Southerland. “We must beat the hell out of t.u.” The owner, Henry Seale, is a Texas graduate. Selective Service Announces Grad Student Draft ‘Reprieve’ Nixon, Humphrey, Wallace: They’re All Students Here Installment Due The third installment of board payment is now being accepted at the Fiscal Office in the Coke Building. Payment of $74 for seven-day and $67 for five-day plans must be paid by Tuesday to avoid penalty. By TONY HUDDLESTON Battalion Staff Writer A careful perusal of the new student directory reveals the secret Aggieland listings of not only all three major presidential candidates, but also a rare assort ment of distinguished authors, television stars, and a few wild animals to boot. In the political arena, at A&M this year are listed three Nixons, five Humphreys, nine Wallaces, two Paulsens, five Reagans and 73 Johnsons. Religiously, there are listed six Bishops, one Priest, one Cardinal, four Popes and one Goldstein. In literature are five Faulk ners, two Hawthornes, four Burns, five Frosts and 26 Scotts. In the entertainment field are one Jerry Lewis, one Johnny Carson, one Steve Allan, one Sammy Davis, two Rowans and 42 Martins. For great names in history there are two Washingtons, one Lincoln, one Robert E. Lee, one Daniel Boone, one Jim Bowie, two Custers, one McArthur, three Hoovers, nine Grants and one Jim Garrison. Among the wildlife are three Birds, two Crows, one Crane, one Wren, three Beavers, six Foxes and one Bull. Colors include 14 Blacks, 32 Whites, 11 Grays, 28 Greens and 57 Browns. Reigning are 25 Kings, five Princes and six Dukes. Miscellaneous monickers include one Spring, six Snows, one Boos, one Beers, one Tom Collins, two Hams and six Houses. Also, nine Fords, five Shep herds, one Fisherman, two Mead ows, one Dollar, one Dollarhide, three Gunns, two Guitars, two Flowers and six Cherrys. And finally there are five Wongs and 26 Wrights. JUSTICE SPEAKS Dr. Blair Justice, research assistant for race relations to Mayor Louis Welch of Houston, addresses an audience of 80 in the MSC Assembly Room in the last of a five-part “People in the Cities” Great Issues Seminar. (Photo by Larry Frisk) Riot ‘Danger Signs’ Listed In Seminar By TIM SEARSON Battalion Staff Writer “Racial violence is like a can cer, in that the danger signals are present in both situations,” Dr. Blair Justice said Tuesday in the final presentation of the Great Issues program, “People and the Cities.” Justice has worked for the past two years under Mayor Louis Welch as the head of the human relations division. He is the author of a number of papers on minority groups and he wrote the manuscript “Violence in the City.” “THE WAY THE people live ‘Snake Doctor’ Seeks Degree Dr. Mike Herron never grew out of his boyhood fancy for snakes. He simply likes them as a person might like a dog, or some other pet. Matter of fact, it’s hard for Herron to remember when he didn’t like snakes, but he dates it roughly age 12 when most boys would rather catch snakes and frogs than eat a hamburger. AT 28, HERRON, an assistant professor in the College of Vet erinary Medicine, is seeking his Ph.D. degree in “herpetological” medicine and surgery. To the laymen it readily con notes “snake doctoring.” But to Herron it means learn ing in a field where little or no information is available for treat ment of zoological specimens or household pet snakes. “WE’RE SEEING more exotic pets,” Herron, a native of Evans ville, Ind., observes. “In talking with people,” Her ron added, “I find more and more people are getting boa constrict ors for pets.” And, he acknowledges, most zoos have extensive reptile houses with some snakes costing up to PREPARES INJECTION Dr. Mike Herron prepares to inject a snake with an abscess at Texas A&M’s College of Veterinary Medicine. He is seeking a Ph.D. degree in herpetological medicine and surr gery. To the layman it means snake medicine. $3,000, “especially if its a good feeder.” “SNAKE HOUSES are the sec ond most popular exhibit—next to monkeys,” he adds. Herron has “no fear of being called a snake doctor” by his colleagues, and readily admits “there is a fascination with snakes.” More than a fascination, how ever, Herron adds, “There is a need for someone to have this knowledge so snakes can be treated.” A QUALIFIED veterinarian, Herron earned his B. S. degree in zoology at George Washington University, and his M.S. and D.V.M. degrees at Purdue Uni versity. Although his vocation is small animal surgery, he hopes his new degree program will offer basic study of normal anatomy and microanatomy, as well as work in pathology and microbiology, as a speciality. “I hope to start out with spe cific diseases and correlate the causes of diseases,” he notes. HE POINTS OUT his main goal is to treat snakes, and “to properly treat, one has to iden tify and know the cause of di sease.” He admits that there are some diseases “harbored in snakes” and that “they are often difficult to treat because snakes may not respond.” Herron noted too, that snakes Bryan Building & Loan Association. Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. BB&L -Adv are problems to maintain in a healthy condition in captivity.” “THE BIG PROBLEM is feed ing,” he relates. He notes that the reason for snakes not eating is still another problem, but feels his research will answer this, as well as other questions. He notes his research will in clude “doing quite a lot of para sitism, both intestinal and those called hemoprotozoans.” He thinks it will be a key to many diseases and respiratory problems in captive specimens. “iMy biggest problem is that I can’t go on past knowledge,” he admits. MANY ZOOS have already in dicated an interest in Herron’s proposed research and are will ing to help. He adds, however, he will need public support by next spring when the project is really under way. He will need both captive and wild specimens—non-poison- ous variety—to conduct his re search. He indicates he’d like to receive at that time healthy and sick snakes. He’ll even take a number of “freshly killed” ones for au topsy purposes, but he prefers they be snakes killed by accident, rather than on purpose! WEATHER Thursday — Cloudy, occasional rain afternoon. Winds Easterly 5 to 10 mph. High 63, low 46. Friday—Partly cloudy. Winds North 70 to 15 mph. High 62, low 38. Kyle Field — Partly cloudy. Winds Calm. 58°. and the way they are distributed in a community are all factors that contribute to race riots,” he said. “Two factors determine the direction of a minority group: how the people accept life; and how the people are trying to better their life.” Justice told the audience of 80 in the Memorial Student Center Assembly Room that the mass media cannot be cited as the cause of race riots. However, by focusing the spotlight of atten tion on a minority group, it low ers inhibitions. “WHEN A COMMUNITY be comes the target of attention, inflammatory incidents can re sult,” said Justice. “After the riots in Watts, attention was fo cused on Oakland because of poor conditions, and a few months later racial riots did start.” The noted lecturer used Hous ton as an example by relating the trouble that led to the riots on the campus of Texas Southern University in May, 1967. He men tioned that Houston came close to being on the “riot map,” but since the problems were not com munity-wide the disturbance did not grow. “THERE ARE TWO different ideas in the black community,” said Justice. “Those Negroes from rural areas seem to have the opinion ‘You can’t miss some thing you never had.’ ” “However, it can not be as sumed that minority groups are not aware of the world around them.” In Justice’s opinion, overcrowd ing does not deter the migration to urban areas by minority groups. The need for improving housing, education, and jobs be comes ever more evident by over crowded conditions. “A RANDOM survey of mem bers of the Negro community in Houston showed that the ma jority of the people felt jobs were the most important issue, followed by education and hous ing,” said Justice. “Housing rank ed so low because 46 per cent of Houston’s Negroes own their own homes.” -Justice cited the geographical dispersion of the Negro popula tion as one reason for the lack of rioting. The separate Negro communities share little solidar ity and do not mix. “Houston is unique in that it (See Riot, Page 4) Draft Director Lewis B. Her- shey’s reprieve for the nation’s graduate students was welcome news here—but also anticipated. Earlier this year, Hershey ordered an end to academic de ferments for all graduate stu dents other than those studying medicine, but Tuesday he altered the policy to allow drafted stu dents to complete their current terms. “This is the basis on which we have advised students since late last summer,” noted Graduate Dean George W. Kunze. “If they (the graduate stu dents) had not received their draft notices prior to enrolling in the fall,” he added, “we felt there was every assurance they would be able to complete the semester.” DESPITE AN A&M survey last spring which indicated up to 40 per cent of the university’s graduate students could have been affected by the new draft laws, a record graduate enrollment was registered this fall. Graduate students this semester total 2,661, the dean noted, for an increase of 396, or approxi mately 17 per cent, over last year. Dean Kunze noted, however, that draft calls have been low ever since the new law went into effect. Still, he estimated A&M’s graduate enrollment would have been at least 100 higher if stu dents had known they could have completed the fall semester. He explained approximately 100 to 150 students withdrew their ap plications in view of the draft. “AS FAR as I know, however, no student has been pulled out of school during the semester,” Kunze remarked. “I think General Hershey’s statement for clarification of the draft law is helpful, in that it will enable the students to make firm plans for at least a semes ter in advance,” the dean ob served. Hershey’s advisory, dated Oct. 24 and published Tuesday in the Selective Service Newsletter, reads: “When college students are ordered to report for induction during a school term in which they are satisfactorily pursuing whole - time post - baccalaureate courses, consideration should be given on an individual case ba sis, to a postponement of induc tion until the end of the term (quarter, trimester or semes ter).” HERSHEY’S new policy was intended to insure that the stu dent’s investment of time and funds for tuition, housing and books would not be lost by the arrival of a draft notice while the students were in the middle of a term, a Selective Service spokesman said. The draft director’s advice, in the form of an advisory, is not binding, the spokesman pointed out, but the advice is usually fol lowed by local and state boards. Civilian Program Expansion Hoped “I have high hopes that the civilian residence hall program will be expanded,” Ed Cooper, civilian student activities direc tor, told the Memorial Student Center Directorate Tuesday. Cooper credited the large num ber of civilians expected for the Bonfire to the residence hall pro grams. “I’m looking forward to the day when the civilians and Corps members can work together to make this a better university,” Cooper told the Directorate,” and I think an expanded residence hall program would go a long way in making it happen. The directorate decided to send 27 or 28 students to the Associa tion of College Unions Conven tion in New Orleans Dec. 5-7. Ornitholigists To Present Three-Screen Slide Show “The Murder of Silence,” a three-screen slide show which has become one of the most popular audio-visual presentations in the state, will be seen here again Thursday. The program, sponsored by the Brazos Ornithological Society, is set for 7:30 p.m. in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom. Admis sion is free and open to the public. Produced and presented by the Texas Parks and Wildlife De partment’s Information - Educa tion Division, the program has been shown more than 50 times throughout the state to audiences averaging 300 persons. Dr. W. N. Williamson of Col lege Station, vice-president of the Brazos Ornithological Society, said “The Murder of Silence” uses three slide projectors, three screens, special electronic equip ment and a trained operator. There are 813 slides, pro grammed to change on cue from recorded high-frequency sound signals. Four sound tracks are involved — one for each slide Penn Prof Slates Graduate Lecture Dr. Benjamin Stevens of the University of Pennsylvania will present a graduate lecture here Dec. 6, announced Graduate Dean George W. Kunze. Stevens, chairman of the De partment of Regional Science at The Wharton School of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, will dis cuss “Regional Science and Eco nomics.” He will speak from 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in Room 226 at the library. Stevens has published exten sively in the field of regional science and is past editor of the Journal of Regional Science. He is also president of the Regional Science Research Association, comprised of 3,500 members from the U. S. and foreign countries, Kunze noted. Stevens received his Ph.D. in Regional Planning and Economics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. change on the three screens and one for music and narration. Williamson said top quality, professional color photography is used to present Texas from the Gulf Coast to the Panhandle and from the mountainous Trans- Pecos to the piney woods. The show points to rapid urbanization and the challenge of providing outdoor recreational facilities to meet needs of Texans and visi tors. The presentation has received a Citation of Merit from the American Institute of Interior Designers, Williamson said. Committee Plans Tour Of Laundry The Student Laundry Commit tee will meet with university offi cials for a tour and explanation of the university laundry facili ties Thursday at noon. A monthly luncheon has also been scheduled for noon Friday. The luncheon will be in the Sbisa Dining Hall Cash Cafeteria. The purpose of the meetings will be to discuss laundry opera tions and to serve as a link of communication between students and university officials. Any student desiring to offer suggestions about the laundry operations and policies is invited to contact one of the committee members. The members are: Arthur P. Callahan, dorm 2, room 118, 845-2760; David George, 211 Fowler, 5-2108; Ernes Godsey, 422 Hughes, 5-3809. David Middlebrooke, 411, Ho- tard Hall, 846-9944; John R. Oliver, dorm 6, room 203, 5-7269; and Al Reinert, dorm 2, room 123, 5-2050. The committee is co-sponsored by Ed Cooper, civilian student activities director, and Maj. Ed mond Solymosy, assistant com mandant of the Corps. Univenity National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M. —Adv.