The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 30, 1974, Image 5

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    ampus landmark undergoes surgery
THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1974
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Page 5
ork
ne of A&M’s oldest campus
flmarks is getting a facelift to
se TAMU’s recently establish-
university press.
two-story wood frame
ing has been the board of
tors’ living quarters and
ing rooms for several years,
ysical Plant craftsmen are
ting the outside, and plans
1 for interior renovation soon.
The old structure will be the
ce of scholarly books when
renovation project is com-
The university press, to be
led by Frank H. Wardlaw, will
n move-in operations when
new board quarters are corn-
1974
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pleted in the new MSC complex.
The building was constructed
originally as a residence for TA-
MU food service directors, Physi
cal Plant officials believe. It has
housed at least three families
since then, including the family
of Bernard Sbisa, for whom one of
the two dining halls is named.
The family longest in residence,
however, was that of W. A. Dun
can, who replaced Sbisa as super
visor of subsistence—food ser
vices—from 1920 until his death
in 1943. Mrs. Duncan remained
in the building until 1952, serving
as hostess for the TAMU Board
of Directors.
PIZZA
INN
FAMILY NIGHT
EVERY TUESDAY—6 P. M. - 9 P. M.
A delicious selection of flavor baked
pizzas and crispy fresh salad with
choice of dressing. All you
Mrs. Percy W. Mims of College
Station is one of two Duncan
children who grew up in the struc
ture. She recalled that the build
ing was also used to house enter
tainers and guest lecturers until
the old Aggieland Inn was con
structed.
“One of my mother’s favorite
guests was Gladys Swarthout, a
famous opera singer who per
formed several times on campus,”
Mims noted. “I also remember
when Bob Hope and Doris Day
spent the night in the building.
That was in 1947, I believe.”
Mims was one of 11 daughters
of TAMU faculty allowed to at
tend classes in 1934. She recalled
that those were good days to be a
young girl on campus.
She met her husband, who was
captain of A&M’s track team in
1932, while she was a resident in
the building. They were married
in 1935 in Guion Hall.
“We were and still are an all-
Aggie family,” Mims noted. “The
days I spent in the house were
some of the best of my life. The
campus then was five miles from
Bryan, with nothing in between,
and we were all one big happy
family.”
Another long-time resident of
the structure was Mrs. M. L.
Cashion Sr., who replaced Mrs.
Duncan as board hostess in 1952
and remained in the house until
her retirement last year.
“The most exciting time I re
call in the house was back when
Texas A&M was searching for a
football coach,” she recalled. “I
think it was the year that “Bear”
Bryant was hired. We had the
Notre Dame coach and the coach
of the Los Angeles Rams in for
interviews by the board.”
Many monumental decisions
were made in the building’s meet
ing room, including the decision to
allow women to attend TAMU
and the name change from A&M
College of Texas to Texas A&M
University, in 1963.
Wheels present problems
,* . A *
Jt’
can eat.
$1.69
Children Under 5 — 7 5 c
By KATHY YOUNG
Faculty and students partici
pated in Wheel Chair Awareness
Day, sponsored by Help Our
People Excel (H.O.P.E.).
Students who volunteered to
ride in wheel chairs Friday after
noon for several hours quickly
acquired blisters on their fingers
and bruises on their arms.
Cracks in sidewalks and pedes
trian traffic presented new found
difficulties. Doors were either
too heavy to open or too narrow
to get through. Water fountains
towered above the wheel chairs
as did most elevator buttons.
Elevators were usually too
small to turn around in and often
did not allow ample time to wheel
aboard. Several students were
hit broadside several times by the
older elevators.
Catalogs, transcripts, the Fiscal
Office and other facilities of the
Coke Building are unavailable
directly to the handicapper stu
dent as it has a moat of stairs
Carpenters, fiddlers
head band debut
15% OFF
On Purchase of $50.00 or Over
10% OFF
On Purchase of $50.00 or Less
^0R YOU AGS WITH YOUR STUDENT I.D.
Douglas Jewelry
212 N. Main
Downtown Bryan
822-3119
Music from “Ballet Parisien”
to highlights of “Fiddler on the
Roof” and “Sounds of the Car
penters” will be presented to
night in the debut of the Univer
sity Symphonic Band.
A pioneer for the U. S. school
band movement, R. V. “Bob”
Leach, will guest conduct for the
concert here.
The new organization that be
gan rehearsing this semester will
perform in the Rudder Center
Auditorium. Conductor Joe Mc
Mullen will mount the podium at
7:30 p. m.
The University Symphonic Band
is composed of musicians from all
parts of the TAMU student body.
Conceived with the support of
President Jack Williams, the band
provides every TAMU student the
opportunity to continue previous
musical experience.
The first performance of the
PASSPORT AND APPLICATION
PHOTOS
irker
Dprkei —
pnotogropriy
FAST SERVICE
^ Peniston
V Cafeteria )
NOW BETTER THAN EVER BEFORE. YOU
WILL BE PLEASED WITH THESE CARE
FULLY PREPARED AND TASTE TEMPTING
FOODS. EACH DAILY SPECIAL ONLY $1.29
PLUS TAX.
MONDAY EVENING
TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
SPECIAL
BROILED BACON
BREADED FISH
WRAPPED
FILET w/TARTAR
MOCK FILET STEAK
SAUCE
GERMAN STYLE
POTATOES
Cole Slaw
Hush Puppies
Choice of one
Choice of one
vegetable
vegetable
Rolls & Butter
Rolls & Butter
Tea or Coffee
Tea or Coffee
WEDNESDAY
EVENING SPECIAL
CHICKEN FRIED BEEF
STEAK w/CREAM
GRAVY
Choice of two
vegetables
Rolls & Butter
Tea or Coffee
organization will feature a variety
of music.
“Melody A La King” and
“Home Town Boy March” will be
directed by Leach, the inspiration
for Meredith Willson’s Broadway
musical “The Music Man.”
Both selections felt the compos
ing touch of the late Karl L. King.
“Home Town Boy” was the last
of many popular marches com
posed for bands by King.
“We are honored to have Mr.
Leach as our special guest,” Mc
Mullen said. Leach, 80 and a
Houston resident, in 1909 organ
ized and directed the nation’s first
high school band in Ackley, Ohio.
He was the first band director
employed by a school district in
America. McMullen made his ac
quaintance immediately on enter
ing public school music.
Leach was for 40 years the
Texas representative of a Chicago
music company. He has heard
more than 8,000 bands as a clin
ician and is responsible for start
ing more than 12,000 students on
band and orchestra instruments.
Admission to the University
Symphonic Band concert will be
$1 per adult and 50 cents stu
dent, public school or university.
Tickets are available at the Rud
der Center box office.
bulletin board
TONIGHT
TAMU WHEELMEN will meet in Room
228 MSC at 7:30 p.m. for elections of
officers.
THURSDAY
PRE-VET SOCIETY will meet in the
main lecture room of the Zachry En
gineering Center at 7:30 p.m.
MIDLAND AREA HOMETOWN CLUB
will meet at Sparkey’s from 6-8 p.m.
for Pizza Party for all people from
Midland, Odessa and Andrews.
FREE UNIVERSITY will present a mini
course in home haircutting in Room
230 of the MSC at 8 p.m.
FORT BEND COUNTY HOMETOWN
CLUB will meet in Room 504 of the
Rudder Tower at 8 p.m. for officer
elections.
PANHANDLE HOMETOWN CLUB will
meet in Room 501 of the Tower at
8 p.m.
FENCING CLUB will meet in the attics
of G. Rollie White Coliseum from 7-9
surrounding the building. Other
inaccessible buildings without
ramps for the handicapped are
the Reed-McDonald Building, Bol
ton and Bizzell.
Vending machines and dining
halls on campus all discriminate
against the non-walking student.
Sbisa, Duncan and Krueger-Dunn
Commons are all isolated by
stairs. Presently there is no
place to eat on campus on
“wheels.”
The need for down ramps from
sidewalks onto the streets was
the loudest criticism from the
participating students. John Fink-
lea, a sophomore who spent two
hours wheeling around, found the
ramps in Zachry too steep. He
also suggested ramps at the corn
ers of Ross and Spence Streets
and in front of the Mechanical
Engineering Shops to the front
of the Chemistry Building.
Jerry Easley, a freshman and
chairman of the Architectural
Barriers of the Paralyzed Vet
erans cautioned bike riders not
to park on ramps. Bikes act as
a barrier to the entrances of
many buildings, said Easley. Low
curbs would aid in crossing
streets, he added. The aisles in
the library are impassable in a
wheel chair as are most rest
rooms, said Easley.
PHYSICAL PLANT craftsmen prepare the old TAMU Board
of Directors building for use as headquarters of the new Texas
A&M University Press.
TSlue bonnet Geutelry by Fbuta
4^eu*ct
(Unique pendants,
bracelets, lockets,
necklaces, pins, earrings,
tie tacks, culKinks and
(ramed miniatures each featuring
a single stem bluebonnet band painted
and fired on fine china.
jAvodabte only at
T6.&i3tu&J£o9m£l ffidc/i
& l pm,'Z x as7780t (713)#2352//
/0:00-530U4on.-QaL
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LL^YD J^YC€
FOR STAT€ R€PR€S€NTATIV€
FOR
Brazos & Robertson Counties
HONESTY
EXPERIENCE
EFFECTIVENESS
CONCERN
☆ ☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
A VOTE FOR JOYCE
A VOTE FOR TEXAS A&M
I am a 1956 graduate of Texas A&M. I am a former A&M
employee with the Agricultural Extension Service. I recognize
that A&M is the biggest economic factor in this district.
Please consider giving me the opportunity to represent
Texas A&M in the state legislature. I can get things done.
Be Sure To Vote On May 4
Advertisement published in compliance with Texas Election Code Article 14.10 (B). Student
Publications Dept., Publisher, The Battalion, College Station, Texas. ,
Paid for by friends of Lloyd Joyce. R. L. “Dick” Peacock, Chairman J
THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL
ITALIAN CANDLELIGHT DINNER — ITALIAN SPAGHETTI
SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE ^ ^
Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad
Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread ^
v Tea or Coffee
You cannot believe you get, “The Whole Thing,” for $1.29
FRIDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
MEXICAN FIESTA
DINNER
TWO CHEESE AND
ONION ENCHILADAS
w/CHILI
Spanish Rice
Patio Style Beans
Rolls & Butter
Tea or Coffee
SUNDAY SPECIAL
NOON and EVENING
ROAST TURKEY DINNER
Served with
Cranberry Sauce & Crabapple
Cornbread Dressing
Rolls - Butter - Coffee or Tea
Giblet Gravy
And your choice of any
One vegetable
‘QUALITY FIRST”
Career Opportunity For College Men and Women
Would you like to earn $10,000 to $25,000 a year (and more) as a salesman? You
can do it right here in Bryan-College Station. No travel is required. We offer a
comprehensive training program. You will receive excellent fringe benefits. There
is an opportunity for rapid advancement.
We pay a guaranteed starting salary of up to $1,200 a month. A bonus plan makes
it possible to earn in excess of $20,000 in the first year and in excess of $30,000 in
the second year. We can prove that this has been done. In recent years our top
salesmen have qualified for trips to Hawaii, Europe, Acapulco, and Caribbean
cruises. After the initial training period our men are self-employed and com
pletely independent.
We are looking for honest, hard working men (and possibly women) who meet
people well and who will work very hard and follow our proved sales system ex
actly. Ordinarily, our men and women have no sales experience, which presents
no problem because the company offers one of the finest training schools in the
industry.
Take a few minutes to investigate this challenging, satisfying and rewarding ca
reer. Call 846-8792 during the week 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. or 846-7333 between
5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. and ask for Mr. Johnson.
,