he Battalion Warm spring days Vol. 66 No. 126 College Station, Texas Wednesday, June 2, 1971 Thursday and Friday — Cloudy to partly cloudy. Southerly winds 10-15 mph. High 88°, low 72°. Saturday — Partly cloudy. Southerly winds 15-18 mph. High 92°, low 71°. Sunday — Cloudy to partly cloudy. Southerly winds 15-20 mph. Afternoon thundershowers. High 88°, low 71°. 845-2226 lev V t( ’71 teen queen here for Thursday talk mmm hi ImpS One of America’s most beautiful and most youthful ambassadors of good will—Rewa Colette Walsh, Miss Teenage America 1971—will speak to about 2,400 4-H Club members and adults Thursday during the State 4-H Roundup here. I Miss Walsh, 17, is scheduled to speak at a 6:30 p.m. banquet in jsbisa Dining Hall. Her topic is “America the Beautiful—Seen Dimly Through the Smog.” She will arrive in College Station on Texas International Airlines at 1:30, visit with some 4-H’ers, and then appear on “Town Talk” on KBTX-TV at 3:30. She is a senior at Magnolia High School in Anaheim, California where she is a member of the National Honor Society and the California Scholarship Federation. She also is a cheerleader and editor of her high school newspaper, among many other activities. Besides this she works an hour a day with emotionally handicapped children at an elementary school. The teen-age Miss is an American citizen although she was born in Sydney, Australia. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Marasco, moved to New York when she was four years old. Her unusual first name (pronounced Ree-wa) is an aboriginal word for good luck. She says there is a lot of talk about a generation gap, but what really exists is a communication gap. As Miss Teenage America, she tries to talk to people of her generation and that of her parents. “No matter what age, color, or nationality a person is, there is a language that can unify all nations of the world, and that is the language of friendship—a smile,” she claims. After graduating from high school she hopes to attend the University of Southern California or the University of San Diego. “I hope to be a professor of English or work with emotionally handicapped children,” she says. Biomedical electronics offered Texas A&M’s Institute of Electronic Science will add bio medical electronics to its curricu lum this fall in an attempt to meet the growing needs of hos pitals and medical research fa cilities, announced Engineering Extension Service Director H. D. Bearden. Institute Instructor Kenneth Bratz will attend a six-week workshop at Baylor University College of Medicine in Houston June 15 to July 23 to study the medical needs and how to incor porate those needs into elec tronics courses. Bratz received a fellowship from Baylor to attend classes in biomedical electronics and ex perimental physiology. The Institute has an 18-month school for electronics technicians with emphasis on communica tions and instrumentation. “Our graduating students have a very advanced knowledge of electronics,” Bratz said. “The only real problem is to find out how much physiology they need and how we can give it to them.” Several Institute graduates have entered biomedical elec tronics and one served as the technician on Dr. Michael De- Bakey’s heart surgery team. Bratz said medical experts pre dict the need for medical elec tronics specialists will increase by 300 per cent within the next five years. “Right now, the armed forces are providing most of the elec tronics technicians to Texas hos pitals,” he said. Many small hospitals have only a maintenance man with basic electronics knowledge servicing equipment, he added. Bratz said he believes medical terminology and an understand ing of medical equipment may be all that is needed for the insti tute to produce a well-educated biomedical technician. “Most medical electronic equip ment has modifications well known to our students,” Bratz said. He plans to spend a lot of time talking with doctors and hospital staff members while at the Bay lor Medical Center to find out their needs. Courses for second and third semester students will have bio medical applications added dur ing the fall semester, he said. Chief Instructor Arlie Patton said he hopes the program also will benefit the local medical fa cilities. “Because we are non-credited, our program is very flexible,” Patton explained. “We have to cater to the needs of industry because electronics is a rapidly changing field.” Bratz was a member of the first institute class that gradu ated in 1965. He worked for Tex aco and Tektronix Inc., before joining the institute faculty in February 1970. The institute has 68 students, including several with medic backgrounds from the armed forces. The 18-month program has almost the same number of class hours as a four-year aca demic college degree program, Patton said. Rewa Calette Walsh, Miss Teenage America for 1971, will talk to those attending the 4-H Roundup here. Pakistan official says story ‘distorted’ version of war $100 gift honors A&M grads A Princeton graduate has made a $100 gift to the Texas A&M student body in appreciation for the “type of graduate being turned out by your institution.” Claude K. Williams of Wil liams Brothers Construction Co. in Houston sent the check to the Texas A&M Development Fund. “In my opinion there would not be the domestic turmoil among the young people today if more institutions of higher learn ing would follow the example of Texas A&M University and the principle to which it is dedicat ed,” Williams wrote. He is a 1945 graduate of Princeton Uni versity. Dr. Jack K. Williams, A&M president, said the money will support approved study body functions and activities during the coming year. An official of the Pakistan Em bassy in Washington has written A&M President Dr. Jack K. Wil liams expressing his concern over a recent Battalion article concern ing Aggie Exes involved in the Pakistani civil war. M. Akram Zaki wrote concern ing an interview May 12 with Kamaluddin Hyder, a native Paki stani, current treasurer of the Graduate Student Council (GSC). Hyder asked the GSC earlier in May to adopt a resolution con demning West Pakistan for armed aggression and asking President Richard Nixon to boycott all for eign aid to Pakistan until the war is over. Zaki expressed concern in his letter to Williams that the Hyder interview gave a “distorted ver sion of the recent developments in Pakistan.” Hyder was quoted concerning the “atrocities” taking place now in his country, involving Texas A&M graduates who have re turned to Pakistan. “It was a full-scale invasion of unarmed civilians,” Hyder said. “And the arms used to slaughter those civilians were given to Paki stan by the United States to de fend it against communism. All foreign reporters were expelled so the world would not know what is going on. “Reports have leaked out that as many as 50 professors at the university at Dacca have been killed. The troops killed a whole dormitory of students while they slept. The students are under standably upset,” Hyder said. “The West Pakistani army is Summer conferences begin next week CAPT. RANDY HOUSE, a 1967 A&M graduate and com manding officer of Charlie Company, U. S. 101st Airborne Division, sports a helmet with a hole made by shrapnel while he was in a foxhole near the Demilitarized Zone. (AP Wirephoto) Summer conferences that will ease Texas A&M University’s 1971-72 new students through the transition to college begin Mon day. Academic counseling, testing, orientation and registration will be conducted during 12 two-day conferences that will continue through August 24. Fall semester classes begin August 30. Each two-day session is limited to 200 new students to allow per sonal attention to individual needs. Parents participate through special orientation and meetings to gain perspective on Texas A&M student life and ’~CTT Of uivK James Garner Elke Somme if SUN SAHARA HARE ANATOMY OF A MURDER " James Scewart lee Femick I'M NO ANGEL AMK'JSHERS Doan Martin Sent a Be rger AIR MANIACS CARPETBAGGERS Georjit. Peppard Carro <1_Baker double'dribble MON KELLY'S HEROES Clint Eastwood Don Sutherland DONALD’S DREAM VOICE LTA'niM zebra Rock Hudson Jim Brown UGLY DUCKLING WHERE EAGliti DARK Richard Burton Clint Eastwood GREENER YEARD IS PARIS BURNING Leslie Caron Jean-Paul Belmondo THREE LITTLE FIGS BATTLE OF THE BULGE Henry Fonda Robert Shaw BONE TROUBLE TUE THE TIME MACHINE Rod Taylor Yvette Mimieux LITTLE HIAWATHA NEVADA SMITH Steve McQueen Suzanne Pleshette TORTOISE AND HARE THE COMANCHEROS John W^ne Ina Balin GET RICH QUICK SHENANDOAH James Stewart Rosemary Forsyth GREAT CHASE THE FLY A1 Hedison Patriela Owens HOW TO HAVE AN ACCIDENT AT WORK 29 WED GOOD NEIGHBOR SAM Jack Lemmon Dorthoy Provine ROAD-RUNNER CARTOON 2 SINK THE BISMARK Kenneth More Dana Wynter SOUP'S ON TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER* Dean Martin Joey Bishop CIRCUS SLICKER 16 TOBRUK Rock Hudson George Peppard WEEKEND DRIVER UNDER THE YUM YUM THEE Jack Lemmon Carol Lynley CALIFORNIA ' BOUND 3f THUR DEVIL AT FOUR O'CLOCK Spencer Tracy Frank Sinatra LUMBER JACK RABBIT 4-D-MAN Robert Lansing James Congdon PLUTO'S FLEDGING ANZIO Robert Mitchum Peter Falk DONALD'S HAPPY BIRTHDAY PIT AND THE PENDULUM Vincent Price Barbara Steele ROAD RUNNER CARTOON THE TRAMPLERS Joseph Cotton James Mitctium BAND CONCERT TORPEDO RUN Glenn Ford Diane Brewster PLUTO'S BLUE NOTE 1L COWBOY Glenn Ford Jack Lemmon WRONG WAY WILLY 18 GOD IS MY COPILOT Dennis Morgan Dane Clark STORK NAKED SAT the educational investment they are about to make. Thirty faculty and staff mem bers in admissions and registrar’s offices, Counseling and Testing Center, Housing Office, School of Military Science and the various colleges are involved in smooth ing the way for the new student. Students are oriented on Army and Air Force ROTC — for those selecting Corps of Cadets mem bership — or civilian student activities, photographed for iden tification cards, measured for uni forms if applicable and can pur chase or reserve fall semester textbooks. If new students pay fees at the conference, they are mailed class schedules and need only pick up room keys upon arrival for the fall semester, said S. Auston Kerley, counseling and testing director who is one of (See Conference, page 7) killing all the leaders in the gov ernment, the universities and the communities in East Pakistan,” Hyder said. “Already over 10,000 people have been exterminated in my home town of Dacca, the capital of East Pakistan. Zaki, of the Pakistani Embassy, said that the army action was resorted to “most reluctantly when no other course was left open.” He compared the Pakis tan conflict to England’s inter vention in North Ireland, where the military took action against armed bands and lawless mobs which were constantly breaking the law and committing crimes. Hyder had claimed the purpose of the government extermination was to wipe out the intelligencia of East Pakistan, and that in cluded 200 Aggie Exes. Zaki said his government’s po sition was one where a threat of sucession was met by armed forces. “The armed forces, having re stored law and order, are now engaged in relief and rehabilita tion efforts and the president of Pakistan has renewed his pledge to work for the establishment of the representative government in East Pakistan as soon as pos sible,” Zaki said. Zaki added it is up to the Pakis- tani government to settle the “family quarrel” among them selves and “no outsiders” had any right to intervene.” A BIG HAND FOR 1 A LITTLE 1ADY j Henry Fonda Joanne Woodward HURRY HURRY 5 Grove shows movies nightly TIME TRAVELERS Preston Foster Joan Woodbury LONDON LANDMARKS FAIL SAFE Henry Fonda Walter Matthau ROAD-RUNNER CARTOON THE MONKEYS UNCLE Annette Tonrniy Kirk GOOD OLD CORN„ Here is the June movie schedule, in easy-to-use calendar form. New titles and old classics are scheduled for the Grove Theater screen this sumiher. Movies under the stars began Monday with “Kelly’s Hereos” starring Clint Eastwood and Don Sutherland. They continue through Aug. 18. Grove Theater presentations are part of the Memorial Student Center’s summer entertainment program. Movies will begin at 8:30 p. m. and include either a comedy or short. Admission is free to ID card-presenting Texas A&M students. Adults, including dates, will be admitted for 50 cents; children under 12 for 25 cents. The bill includes previous fa vorites “Bridge on the River Kwai,” “Cool Hand Luke,” “Req uiem of a Gun Fighter,” “The Ca ine Mutiny” and “Anatomy of a Murder.” Grove newcomers are “Ice Sta tion Zebra,” “Tobruk,” “Great Catherine,” “Not With My Wife You Don’t” and Viva Max,” among others. The film shot at Texas A&M in the 1940s, “We’ve Never Been Licked,” is scheduled as part of a double feature June 16 and July 14. Movies will not be shown July 2-4 and 8-10 during first session finals and the July 4th holidays. The schedule: May 31, “Kelly’s Heroes;” June 1, “The Time Machine;” 2, “Good Neighbor Sam;” 3, “Devil at Four O’Clock;” 4, “The Tramplers;” 5, “A Big Hand for the Little Lady;” 6, “Art of Love;” 7, “Ice Station Zebra;” 8, “Nevada Smith;” 9, “Sink the Bismark;” 10, “4-D- man;” 11, “Torpedo Run;” 12, “Time Travelers;” 13, “Anatomy of a Murder;” 14, “Where Eagles Dare;” 15, “The Comancheros;” 16. “Texas Across the River” and “We’ve Never Been Licked;” 17, “Anzio;” 18, “Cowboy;” 19, “Fail Safe;” 20, “Ambushers;” 21, “Is Paris Burning;” 22, “Shenan doah;” 23, “Tobruk;” 24, “Pit and the Pendulum;” 25, “God Is My Co-Pilot;” 26, “The Monkey’s Uncle;” 27, “Carpetbaggers;” 28, “Battle of the Bulge;” 29, “The Fly;” 30, “Under the Yum Yum Tree.” July 1, “Arabesque;” 5, “Great Catherine;” 6, “Strategic Air Command;” 7, “The Happening;” 11, “Moonshine War;” 12, “The Assassination Bureau;” 13, “Des tination Tokyo;” 14, “Requiem of a Gun Fighter” and “We’ve Never Been Licked;” 15, “Never Too Late;” 16, “Torpedo Bay;” 17, “Task Force;” 18, “Under Ten Flags;” 19, “Cool Hand Luke;” 20. “Kaleidoscope;” 21, “Sullivan’s Empire;” 22, “Not With My Wife You Don’t;” 23, “Against All Flags;” 24, “Journey To Shiloh;” (See Grove, page 7) University National Bank "On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv.