Che Battalion Pgggg^ |i(mi| .. Vol. 68 No. 13(3 11 College Station, Texas Wednesday, August 6, 1975 IBM 360/65 computer This computer, an IBM 360^465 is the smaller of the two computers at TAMU. The other computer which shares peripheral equip ment (card readers, card punch, tape drives and disk drives) is an IMB 370^8145. The Data Proces sing Center hopes to receive an IMB 370ysl68 or similar equip ment in the near future. PRAIRIE VIEW — PVAMU’s first building, Kirby Hall, has now been preserved in a handmade scale model presented to the school through History Department Chairman Dr. George Woolfolk. Woolfolk, chief school historian and recognized scholar, explains that the miniature of Kirby Hall was constructed by 90-year-old former Hempstead resident William Dar ter, now of Austin. Mabelle Purcell of the Sam Hous ton Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution gave the model to PVAMU. The historian, who also holds a top post in the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission of Texas, said that the model represents over 100 years of education at the school’s present site. The main house of the Jared Kirby plantation, Kirby Hall was turned into a girls’ school in 1867 by Kirby’s second wife. The plantation was then known as Alta Vista. The model of Kirby Hall, said Woolfolk, will be painted and dis played in the PVAMA Library. The original building built just before the outbreak of the Civil War, was used until 1933 when it was hauled off . Some of the build ing’s doors still remain in structures on campus, said Woolfolk. The building represented 109 years of education. It was predated by only a handful of colleges in Texas. Kirby Hall became the first clas sroom building at the “Agricultural and Mechanical College for Colored Youth authorized in 1876 by the Morrill Land Grant College Act. Woolfolk said that the new school opened for men in 1878 but was temporarily closed and opened again in 1879 as a coeducational “Normal Institute. As Prairie View expanded, the old building began to slide into the background. Eventually, the school returned to its “A&M ’ designation. In 1922 Kirby Hall was cut into four apart ments for faculty members. Eleven years later, all but a few doors of the mansion were hauled away. In recalling the history of Kirby Hall, Woolfolk said that other uni- Workers continue protest against ‘unfair practices’ The Electrical Worker’s picket of the TAMU campus is still in prog ress after eight days. The pickets, members of the In ternational Brotherhood of Electri cal Workers Local 716, are protest ing what they call “unfair labor prac tices ’ by Collier Electric Co. A Collier management represen tative said no employees are in volved in the picket. The represen tative said the picket will have no effect on their campus project and added, “We will finish on time, as always.” Collier Electric has subcon tracted the job of rewiring Sbisa Di ning Hall. The Union is based in Houston and has 3,000 to 4,000 members. Budget hearing scheduled for August 11 A public hearing on the prelimi nary budget for the A&M Consoli dated Independent School District is scheduled for Aug. 11 at 7 p.m. The hearing will be held in Room 7 of the Special Services Building at 1300 Jersey St. Following the presentation of the preliminary budget by Bill Lancas ter, Budget Committee Chairman for the Board, citizens will be al lowed to address the Board concern ing the budget. The preliminary hearing will be followed by a second and final hear ing on Aug. 18. At that time the Board is expected to adopt the budget. State law requires that the budget be adopted prior to Aug. 20 and that at least one public hearing be held before adoption. Beg your pardon In last week’s edition of The Bat talion, we incorrectly called a pro test by the International Brother hood of Electrical Workers, Local 716, a strike. The protest which is now in its ninth day is simply that — a protest. We appreciate the interested persons calling the error to our at tention. Jim Kentzler, assistant business manager of the union said, “All members of Local 716 are involved as a whole in protesting the unfair labor practices.’’ A suit filed with the Fort Worth office of the National Labor Rela tions Board by the union against Collier accuses the company of vio lating the National Labor Relations CS well ends at 3800 feet By JERRY NEEDHAM City Editor Drilling of the College Station exploration water well ended Tues day night at 10 p.m. at a depth of 3,854 feet. Drilling of the well began in mid-July after approval by the City Council of a contract with the Wha len Corp. of Dallas. Under terms of the contract Wha len Corp. agreed to drill a test well to a depth of 1800 feet. City officials gave approval on July 24 to continue drilling to 3800 feet to determine the quality and quantity of water at that depth. The city is paying all the costs of drilling from 1800 feet to 3800 feet. The drilling operations were sub contracted to Singer-Layne Texas Div. A crew was sent from Midland to handle the drilling. Chuck Rogers, a driller for Singer-Layne, said, “We will pull out of the well checking for water and taking samples as we go. ” Rogers said the water samples will be sent to a testing lab for thorough analysis. The analysis could take from several days to sev eral weeks. The 3,854 foot depth puts the well into the Simsboro Sand forma tion. The Queen City and Sparta Sand formations lie above 1800 feet. Several TAMU wells in the Queen City and Sparta Sand forma tions were abandoned in the 1940’s because of a large amount of sulfur in the water. Jim Dozier, College Station Councilman, said, “I understand from the electric logs taken during drilling that there is a considerable quantity of water in the Queen City and Sparta sands. “If the water in the Simsboro Sands happens to be of good quality and since the sands are characteris tically prolific producers, we can take the option of producing a Simsboro well,” Dozier said, “but the chances of this are slim. ” Dozier said that if College Station wanted to produce water from the Simsboro Sand, a new contract would have to be made with Wha len. If the search for potable water is successful. College Station will buy water from Whalen to supplement their purchases from Bryan. Moody college to offer marine biology degree GALVESTON — TAMU’s Moody College of Marine Sciences and Maritime Resources will begin of fering a new degree program in marine biology this fall. A petition protesting the proposed rate increase by General Telephone was scheduled to be made available for signatures at 8:00 a.m. today in the MSC. David Reedy, a local businessman, and TAMU graduate student and former student body president Steve Eberhard are spon soring the petition. The petition lists several grievances that the two sponsors feel would make General Telephone ineligible to ask for the increase. When completed, the pet ition will be present at the next Col lege Station City Council meeting. Act of 1935. Collier is accused in the suit with hindering union activities and dis criminating against employees for the purpose of discouraging mem bership in a union. The controversy arose when Col lier Electric Co. fired two men with low seniority because of a decrease in the work-load. At least one of the men was a union organizer. He was supposedly paid by the union to work for Collier. A federal investigation will be conducted regarding the suit. Col lier said that by yesterday no federal agency had contacted the firm. Kentzler said, “The length of the picket will depend on the federal investigation.” Equalization board sets dates Meetings of the Board of Equali zation of the A&M Consolidated School District Tax Office are scheduled for Aug. 6 and Aug. 8 at the Tax Office, 107 Timber St. Citizens who wish to appear be fore the Board concerning their tax valuations or revaluations may do so between the hours of 5:15 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. on Aug. 6 and 1:15 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. on Aug. 8. Appointments can be made by calling the Tax Office at 846-1815. Mr. Bill Miller, Tax Assessor/Col lector, said, “The appointment is for the convenience of the taxpayer and is not necessary. Any taxpayer may appear before the open meeting of the Board of Equalization. Without an appointment, those desiring to be heard will have to wait their turn.” Each year the school district tax office re-appraises a portion of the district for tax purposes. This year the College Hills addition, which is the largest sub-division in the dis trict, is being revaluated. According to Mr. Miller, this area has been undervalued at less than the aver age tax-market value for at least three years. Today. Inside Editorials p- 2 Oil p. 6 Sports .pp* 7-12 Weather Partly cloudy and warm Wednesday and Thursday. NE winds 5-10 mph. High both days low 90’s. Low tonight 72. Kirby hall model presented Vet school gets three professors Three new staff members have been announced for the TAMU Col lege of Veterinary Medicine’s Physiology and Pharmacology De partment. Dr. William Jenkins, Dr. Max St. Clair Amoss Jr. and Dr. Duane Carl Kraemer have joined the depart ment, said Dr. James McCrady, department head. Kraemer will be an associate pro fessor at TAMU. He comes from the University of Texas Medical School at San Antonio where he was a clini cal associate professor. He has also been foundation professor at the Southwest Foundation for Research and Education in San Antonio. Amoss comes to TAMU from the Salk Institute. He will be an assis tant professor here. He taught at Baylor College of Medicine until joining the Salk In stitute in 1970. Jenkins, who will be a visiting lec turer here, most recently was head of the veterinary physiology de partment in South Africa’s Univer sity of Pretoria. Amoss and Kraemer will also have duties with the Texas Agricul tural Experiment Station. Basement snackbar to open Food Services is planning to reopen the “basement” snack bar in time for the start of the fall semes ter. The lower-level snack bar, which is located adjacent to the bowling lanes and the bookstore, will supplement the current ser vices provided by the MSC Cafeteria. The “upstairs snack bar will continue its present operations, with the exception that during the lunch hour it will be converted to a cafeteria line. Hours of operation for the basement snack bar have not been set. Lobby chooses Gramm versities on building programs should arrange for pictures and models of older buildings. Only in this way, he said, can pre sent day students share a sense of history with their university or col lege. Woolfolk came to Prairie View in 1943 with a doctoral degree from the University of Wisconsin. Since then, he has come to head both the History Department and Campus Textbook Committee. He holds memberships in the Waller County Historical Survey committee, Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, Texas State Historical As sociation, Southern Historical As sociation, Organization of American Historians, American Historical As sociation, American Association of University Professors and Texas State Teachers Association. He has been listed in the Direc tory of American Scholars, Who’s Who in the Southwest, Who’s Who in the South, Outstanding Educators of America, International Director of Scholars, Contemporary American Writers and the 1973 Minnie Stevens Piper Professors. TAMU team ends study of Texas fort A group of TAMU researchers have concluded a month-long pro ject at Ft. Richardson State Histori cal Park in North Central Texas. The fort site is at Jacksboro, half way between Fort Worth and Wichita Falls. During the project, the group has discovered the sites of a barracks, officers quarters and walkway around the parade ground. Their information, including lo cations of windows and doors and specific dimensions, can be utilized by architects restoring the fort’s buildings. Ft. Richardson was es tablished in 1867 and abandoned 12 years later. Dr. Harry Shafer of TAMU notes that this is the first time TAMU has engaged in this kind of “historical archaeology.” “This type of archaeology in volved a different kind of technique use so that architects may do a realistic restoration of the sites, ” he said. Home gardens offer savings of $190 a month PRAIRIE VIEW — Vegetables from a home garden can save a fam ily of four as much as $190 a month, said a PVAMU graduate student. The figure has been determined by Johnny Dews who is conducting studies for his master’s degree. Dews raised six small plots using natural fertilizer and calculated the cost of the vegetables produced if bought in the market. The longer growing season for the Texas Gulf Coast can mean seven to nine months of growth and savings, said Dews. He is currently preparing the test plots for a fall garden. Dr. W. Philip Gramm, TAMU professor of economics, was elected a Director at Large for Common Sense, Inc., a public interest lobby group which held its first annual meeting in Austin last weekend. He was also appointed director of the group’s Research and Action teams. Gramm is a Georgia native who has been at TAMU since 1967. He is widely published on economic sub jects such as energy, inflation, bank ing and the environment. He has been consultant to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, the Texas Hospital association and the Canadian government. Language workshop scheduled About 20 students are scheduled to enroll. A German language workshop for incoming TAMU freshmen began last Monday. Lasting for two weeks, the prog ram is designed for intensive review by students with one or more years of high school German. The workshop should enable the students to begin their study of lan guage on an intermediate or upper level by placement in one or more Former Students to play golf TAMU’s Association of Former Students will hold its 1975 Alumni-Faculty-Staff Golf Tourna ment on Aug. 22-23. Played on the par 70, 6,244-yard TAMU course, the alumni tourney will be a 36-hold competition under Florida scramble rules. Approxi mately 144 golfers are expected to play. Prizes are planned for the first three four-man teams plus distance and accuracy awards. Friday dinner and Saturday breakfast and lunch are scheduled at the Aggieland Inn. A women’s program is also planned. The tournament provides finan cial support for the TAMU golf program. The 1974 event earned $1,000. Winners last year, at 10 under par, were Ed Ruhmann of Kenedy, TAMU Professor Emeritus Dr. Carl Tishler; Marvin Tate, assistant ath letic director, and Jim Page, ac tivities vice president of the associa tion. Association Field Director Tom Nelson and Luke Harrison, TAMU course pro, are arranging the tour nament. Davies appointed by Briscoe AUSTIN — Alfred I. Davies, a member of the TAMU System Board of Directors, has been ap pointed by Governor Dolph Briscoe to the newly created Joint Advisory Committee on Government Opera tion. Davies is Sears, Roebuck and Co. executive vice president in charge of Southwestern territory. He was one of the first five ap pointees named by the governor to the so-called Little Hoover Com mission created by the Legislature according to the Associated Press to make state government more economical. Also named were Calvin Guest, president of Bryan Building & Loan Association; R. J. Nunley, Sabinal rancher; Harry M. Provence, editor-in-chief of the Waco News- Tribune and Times-Herald and chairman of the Coordinating Board, Texas College and Univer sity System; and Herbert Frensley of Houston, president and chief executive officer of Brown & Root, Inc. The governor will make four additional appointments. Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby will chair the committee, which also will include House Speaker Bill Clayton, three state senators and three other members of the House of Represen tatives . Davies, a 1935 TAMU graduate was appointed by Gov. Briscoe to a six-year term on the TAMU System board in January. Protest petition available A petition protesting the pro posed rate increase by General Telephone was scheduled to be made available for signatures at 8:00 a.m. today in the MSC. David Reedy, a local business man, and TAMU graduate stu dent and former student body president Steve Eberhard are sponsoring the petition. The petition lists several grievances that the two sponsors feel would make General Telephone inel igible to ask for the increase. When completed, the petition will be present at the next Col lege Station City Council meet ing.