be Battalion Vol. 67 No. 123 College Station, Texas Wednesday, May 17, 1972 Sunny and mild 845-2226 ft&M'S NEW YELL LEADERS are shown in front of the Itatue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross. The group, elected by [he student body to serve during the 1972-73 school year, Mists of, left to right, Griff Lasley of Stratford, John McNevin of Angleton, C. H. Long of Raton, N. M., Hank Paine of LaGrange and Bob Sykes of Eldorado. Long, who is the head yell leader, McNevin and Paine are seniors, and Lasley and Sykes are juniors. WE Former chancellor Gilchrist services held here Funeral services for Gibb Gil- pist, chancellor emeritus of the [exas A&M University System j Ind former state highwaw engi- \ leer, were held here Monday. 11 He died Friday in a Bryan llospital after a long illness. [■The Rev. James A. Brannen ; Wficiated at services in the A&M llnited Methodist Church. Burial ■llowed in the College Station lemetery. i I Survivors are his wife, Vesta, [I If College Station; a son, Henry, of Dallas; grandson, Thomas Gibb, and granddaughter, Terri. Gilchrist, 84, was president of A&M from 1944 until 1948, when he was named chancellor of the A&M system. He retired in the position in 1953. His home was near the TAMU campus where he visited frequently in con sultant capacity. Gilchrist joined the Texas Highway Department in 1919 and was named state highway engi neer in 1924. After three years he went into private business but returned in 1927 to the highway department’s top administrative post. In 1937, he joined the A&M faculty as dean of engineering. A native of Wills Point, Gil christ attended Southwestern University at Georgetown a year before entering the University of Texas. He received a civil engi neering degree in 1909. Simultaneous articles in the UT and TAMU alumni magazines last fall cited Gilchrist’s dedica tion as “one of the most distin guished professional engineering careers in the nation.” He was active in masonry and was grandmaster of the Masonic Lodge of Texas in 1951. Pallbearers were Frank Ander son, Fred Benson, Bob Cheno- weth, Leslie Hawkins, W. L. Pen- berthy and Wayne Stark. M More rainfall Is expected in next month I Drouth-busting rain that began lln late April is expected to con- finue into June. The 30-day outlook issued by he U. S. Weather Service for nid-May to mid-June includes ibove normal rainfall of more han five inches and below nor- nal temperatures. April precipitation totals by ^servers in an A&M meteorology esearch project do not reflect the urrent wet spell. They averaged .52 inches. Most of it came dur- ng the last four days of April, iccording to Dr. Robert A. Clark, neteorology research project di rector. Totals for the first half of May range from five to seven inches. Jim Lightfoot, Meteorology De partment meteorologist, said the May total at Bizzell Hall stands near six inches. He lives at Millican and has measured over seven inches there. An observed near Finfeather Lake has gauged More than five so far this month. Gauges located across the Carter’s Creek catchment area had April measurements rang ing from .94 inch in the 900 block of Gordon in Bryan to 3.88 inches near Wellborn. Observers in the East Yegua Creek basin west of Caldwell, where another project is under way, averaged 2.23 inches last month. University National Bank "On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. A&M - designed shelter shows strength of paper Instant shelter that pops into the air with Houdini swiftness has been designed by A&M stu dents in architecture and envi ronmental design. Suggested by Origami paper folding, the shelter is seen by its designers, Andy Beck of East Meadow, N. Y., and Elsworth Watts of Galena Park, as a com petitor with family-size tents for camping. Beck and Watts have demon strated a full-scale 30-foot wide prototype that seated 32 for a meal. Constructed of laminated, corrugated cardboard, it dis assembles into four 12 by 18-foot sections for transport on a car roof-rack. “We’re still developing the idea,” explained Beck, a senior environmental design major. “We are working on a patent and funds for research. Some firms have claimed interest in it.” They hope to market the shel ter for camping and recreational purposes and smaller versions as toys. A quarter-size model has served as a doghouse. Beck and Watts began study ing the construction in a senior environmental design course in structed by Rodney Hill. The idea originated in a evil engineering materials course of Dr. Dale Webb. He opened class one day by demonstrating paper forms de rived from the ancient Japanese art of paper folding, Origami. Webb’s dughter showed him the folds. A basic fold led to the star shaped shelted that Beck and Watts also built in quarter, two- fifths and half-size models. Twen ty-one 7 by 15-foot sheets of card board supplied by Container Corp. of America went into the full size shelter. They fabricated it during the first two weeks of April. It has been demonstrated at the Okla homa State instant city at Still water April 20-24, as the central display at the national American Institute of Architects conven tion and in San Antonio last weekend. Beck plans to take it to “Whiz- Bang Quick City II” at Wood- stock, N. Y., May 26-June 9. “It has been set up by people A&M chemists given NSF grants A&M chemists Dr. Ralph A. Zingaro and Dr. Edward A. Mey ers have been awarded an addi tional $10,000 National Science Foundation grant for research in to the elements selenium and tel lurium. Study of the two lesser known elements was first funded in Feb ruary of 1971 with a $58,900 NSF award. A&M’s Chemistry Department has researched chemical elements for the past 16 years. One part of this study is an attempt to find oxygen-carrying selenium compounds. who never saw it before,” he said. Beck noted that the only hard ware is “16 bolts to make it rigid and, though tiedown is un necessary, nine tent stakes and 30 feet of rope.” Two or three persons can walk the four sections together in less than 10 minutes. The prototype withstood two straight days of rain, thunder storms, hail, 90-degree heat and people. Designed for a four or five-member family, the shelter will sleep 17 and has about 80 square feet standing headroom for an average size individual. “It will set up almost any where, on a hillside or flat ground,” claimed Beck. “When ditched like a tent, it turns aside running water.” The design is virtually im pervious to high winds, Webb pointed out. Wind presses the shelter tighter against the ground. Origami folds give the Beck-Watts shelter its strength. One of the small-scale models sup ported Webb’s 200 pounds. “Paper hs high strength quali ties,” the materials specialist noted. “In the usual geometry, paper just appears flimsy.” He said students tested load-bearing characteristics of an 814 by 11- inch sheet rolled into a cylinder. With a plaster-molded base, it took 100 pounds. Unfolded, the scale models with tape hinges lie flat on the ground like a square of paper. One simple movement erects the shel ter. Freeze saved U.S. economy, Pitcock says President Nixon’s wage-price freeze has saved the country economically and given the heavy construction industry a short breathing spell to solve its man power problems, a Houston con tractor declared at an A&M seminar Friday. James D. Pitcock Jr., president of Williams Brothers Construc tion Co., Inc., challenged 32 top executives from construction com panies across the state to get involved in manpower manage ment to guarantee survival for the industry. “We are not making the max imum profit out of our business until we have solved our man power problems,” Pitcock said at the seminar sponsored by TAMU’s Civil Engineering De partment, Texas Transportation Institute and the Texas Highway- Heavy Branch of the Associated General Contractors. He contended manpower prob lems have reached a “crisis stage.” Pitcock said they include lack of skilled labor, decreased pro ductivity, escalating wages, ab senteeism, high turnover, higher accident rates, loss of manage ment’s right to manage, lack of workmanship pride, government improvement, low morale in the industry and lack of dignity in construction work as an occupa tion. “This problem of skilled labor, or the imbalance of supply and demand for skilled labor, is the basic cause of all other man power problems,” Pitcock re ported. He said the high demand for skilled labor has led workers to take advantage of that demand. Pitcock noted a recent trade journal article showed a Chicago brick mason laid 600 brick a day in 1928, whereas today two ma sons are required for the same work and togeher they lay only 100 bricks a day. “So if we consider his produc tivity as 100 per cent in 1928, his productivity today would be a little over eight per cent,” Pit cock related. Escalating wages and decreased productivity, he said, resulted during 1968-69 in a 40 per cent increase n wages, 50 per cent de crease in productivity, or an in crease in cost of 280 per cent. Pitcock told the contractors wage increases were abut 20 per cent in 1970 and were going even higher when the freeze was an nounced. Absenteeism, or what Pitcock called the “Monday syndrome,” has become so bad that super visors have no idea what kind of a work force they can plan on working any day, particularly Monday. The major cause of accidents, he alleged, was a combination of high turnover, absenteeism, un rest and low morale. He said the lack of skilled workers has been affected by the labor union control over the relative - friend apprenticeship programs and the movement of people with hard-work agricul tural backgrounds to the city. Pitcock claimed unions “have been allowed to keep an artificial deficiency of supply and create an excess of demand, just through closing the doors to entrance into the trades.” He observed the heavy con struction industry has neglected solutions to manpower problems for years, but now they must be solved in a hurry. Pitcock said something has to be done within the industry be cause the enemies of the free enterprise system want “complete redistribution of wealth, destruc tion of entrepreneural wealth and consequent destruction of the capitalistic system.” The conference was built around two workshop sessions where the executives discussed problems and solutions in a roundtable format. Four Aggies to participate in summer travel program Four A&M students will travel in Europe this summer through the Experiment in International Living (EIL), a program sup ported by the Memorial Student Center Travel Committee. Independent travel and foreign study arrangements are also be ing made by the committee for four or five other students. The Experiment, which en hances intercultural understand ing by locating students as mem bers of families in several coun tries, will this year have TAMU students in Russia, Switzerland, Germany and Spain. Gregory M. Eastin, senior political science major of Fort Worth, will be in the USSR. He transferred to A&M from Tar rant County Junior College. Deborah J. Fisher of College Station will go to Switzerland. She will be a senior next fall in modern languages and is the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. H. Bruce Fisher, 1100 Dominik Dr. Spain and Germany are the goals, respectively, of freshmen Charles D. Rankin Jr., political science major of McAllen, and Steven J. Eberhard, math major of New Braunfels. A President’s Scholar, Eberhard is in Company F-2 in the Corps of Cadets. Eastin, Fisher and Rankin plan their travel through loan assistance from the Travel Com mittee. Four students including the Brown Foundation-Earl Rudder Award winner, Kirk Hawkins of San Angelo, are planning inde pendent travel in Europe. Haw kins was an Experimenter to Yugoslavia last summer and hopes to re-visit his “family” there, if visas can be arranged. In the group also will be 1972- 73 seniors in civil engineering, John Landgraf of Silsbee and Fletcher Kelly, Sinton. A politi cal science major, presilent of next year’s senior class and yell leader, Henry C. (Hank) Paine of La Grange also will make the trip. Kelly will be Company F-l commander and Landgraf First Brigade operations officer. Land graf and Hawkins worked to gether on the Town Hall com mittee this year. Travel Committee chairman Jim Summers assisted in arrange ments. Banquet crowd honors Timm for service Nearly 400 persons packed the Memorial Student Center Ball room recently to honor a man who has become a widely recog nized leader in agricultural eco nomics. He was Dr. Tyrus R. Timm, who has headed the A&M Agri cultural Economics and Rural So ciology Department for the past 19 years. The economist has asked to return to full time teaching and research. He will continue to serve as department head until a replacement is found. The MSC Balh-oom was the scene of an appreciation banquet where Timm was praised for his accomplishments and association with A&M that date back to the early 1930’s. Ceremonies were led by Reagan Brown, sociologist with the Texas Agricultural Extension Service. A program highlight was pre sentation of $2,500 to Timm, which he will use to make a study tour of the European Common Market. He is considered an au thority on the European Econom ic Community, having made four trips there during the 1960’s. Timm was described as a friend, professional, citizen, Ex tension worker and team member by Dr. A. B. Wooten, director of A&M’s Texas Real Estate Re search Center; Robert Cherry, as sistant to A&M President Jack Williams; Coulter Hoppess, Bry an attorney; Dr. John E. Hutch ison, Extension Service director; and Dr. H. O. Kunkel, dean of the A&M College of Agriculture. The testimonials were rounded out with presentation of the key to the city by College Station Mayor Dick Hervey. SHOWING A MODEL of a 7i/ 2 -foot, instant shelter is Andy Beck, an A&M student, who designed the device with Elsworth Watts. Unfolded along tape hinges, it is a square of cardboard. One simple movement erects this version, which has served as a doghouse and supported a 200-pound man.