the ^1 m the fieU’ history f| t has mine ‘ n d grants.; U3 age,jtj ty and H, 'f Texas,;, ed in 19{- nerce, bet -aught at! UT-AustiJ rs teachit; M WE GIVE ..i.T^sr •&K o F=?ecs STAMPS ^ 3RCCN STAMPS m H SSI5 H pecn AMP8 ;— Imps! Warm, THURSDAY — Cloudy, after noon showers. Wind southerly 10 to 15, high 97, low 75. humid, wet FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUN DAY — Cloudy, rainshowers. Wind southerly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High temperature in the mid 90’s, low in the mid 70’s. Vol. 66 NO. 134 College Station, Texas Wednesday, July 28, 1971 840-2226 A&M gets ok for new college Establishment of the College of Marine Sciences and Maritime Resources at Galveston as an edu cational unit of Texas A&M was approved Tuesday by the insti tution’s board of directors. A&M President Dr. Jack K. Williams said implementation of plans for the new college will be under way by Sept. 1. The College of Marine Sciences and Maritime Resources will in clude the Texas Maritime Acad emy, Moody Marine Institute and the Coastal Zone Laboratory. The Moody Marine Institute will consist of the Marine Labo ratory and, later, teaching units for such fields as marine life sci ences and marine economics. The majority of the new col lege’s activities will be conducted at Texas A&M’s 100-acre Mitchell Campus on Pelican Island. The Marine Laboratory, however, will continue to be headquartered across town at Ft. Crocket. The first two buildings on the Mitchell Campus are expected to be ready for use by Sept. 1. Wil liams said detailed plans are be ing compiled for the campus’ first residence hall, which will accom modate nearly 200 students. Master plans provide eventu ally for approximately 20 build ings on the Galveston campus. Authority to create the new col lege was made possible through legislation introduced in the 62nd Legislature by Sen. A. R. Schwartz of Galveston and Rep. Bill Presnal of Bryan. University officials said any new degrees or new courses of fered through the new college will require approval by the Coordi nating Board, Texas College and University System. Williams said establishment of the new educational unit is part of the university’s continuing ef fort to lead the nation in marine- related activities. University officials emphasized creation of the new college is an expansion of the institution’s ma rine activities and will not reduce the level of marine-related activ ities here. Earlier this year the university formed the Center for Marine Re sources here. The center includes the institution’s Sea Grant Pro gram and provides an administra tive framework for developing va rious marine-related programs. Creation of the new college does not directly affect the university’s Oceanography Department, which is part of the College of Geosci ences, or the Coastal and Ocean Engineering and Environmental Engineering Divisions of the Civil Engineering Department. The Oceanography Depart ment’s research vessels, however, are berthed at the Mitchell Cam pus. A&M budget $73.5 million GALVESTON—Texas A&M re ceived approval Tuesday for a 1971-72 budget of $73,571,869, up $2,904,640—or 251.7, 14.1 per cent —over the 1970-71 budget. The action came during a meet ing here of the Texas A&M Uni versity Systetm Board of Direc tors. Overall the board approved $144,971,411 in operating budgets for the system’s parts. That systems consists of Texas A&M, Prairie View A&M, Tarle- ton State, the Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory, the Texas Forest Service, the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, the Texas ^Engineering Extension Service, the Texas Engineering Experi ment Station, the Texas Trans portation Institute and the Texas Maritime Academy. The board also authorized es tablishment of the Occupational Health and Safety Institute at Texas A&M. Prairie View A&M College re ceived funds totaling $14,209,062, up $2,904,640 for a 25.7 percent gain. Tarleton State College’s oper ating budget next year was set at $5,152,514, for an increase of $421,081 or 8.9 percent. The Texas Maritime Academy’s University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. budget was increased $30,179, to $1,050,001, up three percent. Operating budgets for other parts of the Texas A&M system are: Texas Agricultural Experi ment Station, $16,775,915, up $1,235,659 for an eight percent increase; Texas Agricultural Ex tension Service, $18,452,184, up $3,345,333, an increase of 22.1 per cent; Texas Engineering Experi ment Station (including the Tex as Transportation Institute), $7,- 911,334, up $331,768, a gain of 4.4 percent; Texas Engineering Ex tension Service, $2,256,033, up $724,013, an increase of 47.3 per cent; Texas Forest Service, $2,- 966,593, up $209,500, a gain of 7.6 percent, and the Rodent and Pred atory Animal Control Service, $627,510, up $48,101 for an 8.3 percent increase. The only category showing a decrease was system offices and departments. Funding for such administrative activities was re duced 10.4 percent, or $232,255, to $1,998,396. Additionally, the board formal ly approved the budgets for two state activities located on the Texas A&M campus, the Texas Petroleum Research Committee and the Texas Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory. The pe troleum research committee will operate next year on a $60,000 budget, while the diagnostic lab oratory has been authorized $277,419. The Occupational Health and The journalism workshop going on here this week has many facets. Terry Lopez learns by doing during an after noon newspaper laboratory session. WELCOME RELIEF came Tuesday as thundershowers a dry, dusty spell even a few inconvenient puddles don’t occurred in the area, fulfilling the promise (or threat) seem so bad. (Photo by Debi Blackmon) clouds had been making for the last week or so. After 14 area youth attend Journalists here for workshop Safety Institute approved by the board will be administered by the Texas Engineering Experiment Station. “The institute should well serve the interests of the people of Texas, including employers, em ployees and consumers,” said En gineering Dean Fred J. Benson, TEES director. He said the institute will con centrate on research, experiments and demonstrations relating to occupational health and safety, as well as research involving con sumer product safety for manu facturers and consumers. The institute also will be in volved in continuing education and special education programs in the health and safety fields for the benefit of personnel in such fields as industry and gov ernment. Local man honored at Austin meeting Texas Gov. Preston Smith has announced that the Rev. William Oxley of College Station who is among the chairmen of the 21 regional planning committees for the Texas Commission on Alco holism was honored at the 14th Annual Institute of Alcohol Studies. As chairman of one of the re gional planning committees, Ox ley helped to develop the Texas State Plan for Prevention, Treat ment and Control Fourteen Bryan-College Station high school students are among 350 students from throughout the state attending the one-week High School Journalism Confer ence here. Attending from B-CS are Kathy Rodenberger, Beki Reeves, Nancy Meuth, Carol Goehl, Kay Hanna, Noel Durrant, Wayne Vermillion, Steve Stanley, Richard Bay, Mary T. Lopez, Marcy Roman, Jan ;Jones, Susan Eller and Philip Costa. The conference, sponsored by the Journalism Department, in cludes lectures and practical ex perience in three divisions: news paper, yearbook and photography. The yearbook division, headed by Kathleen Leabo, Divisional Di rector of College Station, includes the actual production of Summer time, a student yearbook sponsor ed by Diane Lang. Lectures include new techniques in layout, typography and styles involved in production of a high school yearbook. At the end of the week, awards will be given to each school showing outstand ing achievement in specialized work areas. George Pearson of St. Paul, Minn., heads the newspaper di vision. High school students in the division are exposed to the routine of newspaper work, pro ducing a newspaper daily the en tire week. A workshop newspaper, The Workshopper, sponsored by Eliza beth Hurley of Pampa, will be published at the end of the week. Students are presented new ideas in typography, legal and ethical issues involved in newspaper work. Directing photography are Dr. C. William Horrel, from Southern Illinois University, C. J. Leabo, Journalism Department head, and Dr. Otha C. Spencer of East Tex as State University. “Students of all levels are in volved in this course,” Horrell said. “So far, no diasters, just one ‘almost’.” Students in the photography classes learn to handle their own cameras, along with developing procedures and printing processes involved in photography. Special speakers this year in cluded Shel Hershorn, free-lance photographer from Dallas, and Sister Ann Christine Heintz of Chicago. An awards banquet is sched uled Friday night and a Mr. and Miss Workshopper contest is to be held tonight at a dance in the Memorial Student Center to se lect the two most outstanding members attending the confer ence. Heaton says new coed count should be double last year’s Enrollment of new coeds this fall is expected to be nearly double that of last year. H. L. Heaton, dean of admis sions and records, said 569 be ginning freshman coeds and 278 women transfer students have been accepted for enrollment as of July 1. This total of 847 corresponds with a figure of 475 last year, Heaton said. He pointed out the tabulation does not include the 1,411 wom en, slightly more than 10 per cent of the student body, who were enrolled here last spring. Heaton said the trend is ex pected to continue as the uni versity moves toward on-campus housing for women. A new resi dence hall, with one wing de signed to accommodate 500 co eds, is under construction and scheduled to be ready for the start of the 1972 fall semester. But theory is important too. Newspaper division in- Yet it’s not all work. Sophie Mikus takes time out after moving into her dormitory structor Bob Trager helps the high school writers learn 12 room to relax and practice that ever-popular A&M activity, bagging it. (Photos by Ed through informal lecture and discussion. Dutch)