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HomeMy WebLinkAboutFaculty and Staff Supporting Materials I Texas A &M University 12TH MAN FOUNDATION orporate earn Beni i • Corporate identification in local news publications. • Corporate identification at all home football games on the Kyle Field Sony Jumbotron. • Corporate identification in The 12TH Man Magazine, which is circulated to 20,000 people 19 times a year. • Exclusive access to The Zone Club (club level ticket holders onlvl. • Preferred parking passes for all home games. • Ticket options for all home football games. • Option to purchase road game tickets. • Savings of over 20 %. • Corporate identification on our web page. • Official 12th Man Flag for your Business Contribution Zone Club Web Page Local Newspaper 12th Man Jumbotron Football Parking Corporate Level Access Advertising Advertising Magazine Identification Tickets Passes Flag Gold Silver Bronze Corporate Team Summary The 12TH Man Foundation Corporate Team was designed with Aggies in mind. The Corporate Team is divided into six levels of giving, each varying in price range in order to meet the desires of all our corporate donors. The six levels of corporate seating are made up of seats in The Zone Club, The Touchdown Terrace, The Goal Line Stands, and Bench seating areas. The Zone Club level is the premier seating location in Kyle Field. All 1,800 open -air armchair seats are protected from the elements by an overhang. At the top of the seating area, Zone Club seat holders can enjoy exclusive access to the 14,000 square foot club area. The club provides an ideal environment where your clients and co- workers can relax and enjoy the game. The Touchdown Terrace truly provides the coach's perspective. See entire plays develop from start to finish. This vantagepoint allows you to more clearly see the line play on both sides of the ball as well as running backs exploding through holes and making long runs. One trip to The Touchdown Terrace will convince you that it provides the best view in the stadium. The Goal Line Stands offer a great seating location from which to experience the atmosphere of Kyle Field on game day. This level of seating brings you closer to the field than ever before. In addition to a great point of view (in which to view the game) this particular level boasts a large field view concourse area that allows you to move from your seat and socialize with friends or conduct business with important In addition, the corporate team also includes bench seating as one of its options. Bench seating is located in The Touchdown Terrace. This level of seating affords you an easy, cost - effective way to provide incentives for your employees and clients. Everyone's needs cannot be met with one seating plan package. If you are interested we will be glad to work with you to tailor a plan for your company's needs and expectations. Please call the 12TH Man Foundation Development Office in order to speak to a representative who can assist you with your Annual Corporate Team. If you would like to call us, please call 1- 888 - 826 -1284 or (409) 691 -8251. *In order to customize a corporate package, you must purchase a minimum of 6 seats. BEEN THERE, DONE THAT Ighty- six - year -old Woodrow Bailey, Texas A &M University class of '36, listens as his peers share stories recorded by Oral history project attempts to capture what records miss By BOB SCHOBER Eagle Staff Writer B ud Denton, 76, says he remembers a time when there were only two cars on the entire Texas A &M University campus. Mary Eckles, who was born on the campus in 1909, says echoing in her memory is the old campus power plant whistle — the blaring sound that called students to classes at 8 a.m., signaled Thursday, July 16, 1998 RFIon lunchtime at noon and trumpeted the end of the workday at 5 p.m. "When it didn't sound, no one knew what to do," she said, gig- gling. Eckles, Denton and 23 other long- time local residents gathered Wednesday to share their memo- ries of how life used to be in Col- lege Station. The gathering was the 11th session of Memory Lanes, the city's oral history project. "Life was so different back then, The Bryan - College Station Eagle Eagle photo /Dave McDermand tape and video for Memory Lanes, College Station's oral his- tory project. so what I'm interested in is the interesting little ways of life," said Bill Lancaster, chairman of the Historic Preservation Committee. "All the statistical stuff is a mat- ter of record and stored some- where," he said, "but nowhere does it say what people did on Sunday afternoons, where they went on vacations, what their relationship with A &M was. We want to know Please see HISTORY, Page Al2 History I From A how people lived, what they did for entertainment in what was then a very small town." Scores of senior citizens, most 65 to 100 years old, have come forth since 1994 to share anec- dotes, quips and remembrances of the period from 1900 to 1949. Many of their stories may find their way into a historical refer- ence book. The city is negotiat- ing with an author for the job, Lancaster said. The local history project is being guided by the College Sta- tion Conference Center Advisory Committee and the Parks and Recreation Department's His- toric Preservation Committee. People with old connections to A &M showed up for Wednes- day's session to talk about their memories of the campus. Previ- ous sessions focused on other professions or sections of the city, including old -time North - gate business owners, Southside residents and former educators. Wednesday's group of 25 peo- ple was split up into several groups of three or four. Each group had a moderator and note taker, and the sessions were videotaped. The transcriptions and tapes eventually will be stored in a fire -proof safe in the Parks and Recreation Depart- ment, according to Grace Cal - bert, supervisor of the Confer- ence Center. Calbert coordinated the oral history project. Denton and Eckles were joined by Billie Marburger Trail, 78, and Lolly Penberthy, 87, to share memories of A &M and the city. Penberthy was a bride in 1932, and she and her late husband, Walter, lived on campus in 1935- 36 while he founded the A &M Health and Kinesiology Depart- ment. He also founded the intra- mural sports program, she said. Denton enrolled at A &M in 1941 and left to fight during World War II. He returned to College Station in 1946 and even- tually took a teaching job at A &M Consolidated High School. "I used to make $3,600 for a full year," he said. "When I look back, I had more money then than when we were both work- ing," he said. Trail remembered a childhood without motorized transporta- tion and she and other children would line up alongside a road to wait for a ride, which often meant jumping into the back of a farmer's pickup. "It wasn't considered danger- ous at that time," she said. 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C _ . 7 /0>412, .5 0 171 / 0 - _ _ f - o x • -/ /nee" (!ILI , • _ . • .// & 1 ‘ 21 - -1:411— C" A-44- W 4- CI-A- 7 Li t J • 744- 6 - 6 • e /1 r. r 4; - 01.7 f X�: <... a• !,lL[ , �G, ie r•,- /c3 ;(is_ 1 /c /i /a 4 7 r X „_ 4 Y 0 00 /C .� F-- a fn1 { 4 , ' V , i I . II `3/ co a y5! v • !.1_. 44 .. 11 1 1 �/ #� 7 /LJ . t -8 -s / - L 4 • 4 1717 3 33x7;:.. . S 4 0 aa -r Pte I44 3 ,ia _�- e‘e?..:er N.cra(.. r " /K - Wednesday, June 3, 1998 Eagle Staff Report The new College Station Library has set up a display in observance of National Garden Week. The display will feature a joint proclamation by College Station Mayor Lynn Mcllhaney and Bryan Mayor Lonnie Stabler. The A &M Garden Club was The Bryan - College Station Eagle Page A13 Library sets up gardening display _organized in 13 and has been active as a Federated Garden Club serving the community for 60 years. The display will feature photographs of current club activities and books on gardening available at the library. Another item of interest is the A &M Gar- den Club Scrapbook, circa 1974, including pictures of the Brazos .ValleYst that_.tm2. • • Tuesday, June 16, 1998 The Bryan - College Station Eagle 1 Tom D. Cherry Nov. 25, 1910 — June 13, 1998 Services for Tom D. Cherry, 87, of College Station, are set for 10:30 a.m. Thursday at A &M United Methodist Church in College Station. Dr. Bob Waters will officiate. Burial will be in New Waverly Cemetery in New Waverly, Texas. Callaway -Jones Funeral Home is handling arrange- ments. Visitation will be from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. Mr. Cherry was born in New Waver- ly and had lived in Bryan since 1962. He was vice president emeritus for Texas A &M University. He received a bachelor's degree in business administration from Sam Houston State University in 1932 and a mas- ter's in marketing and finance from Texas A &M in 1938. He was co-founder of the Texas Association of State Senior College and University Business Officers and served as president of the organiza- 1' tion in 1969. He was a member of A &M United Methodist Church. He was preceded in death by his wife, Minnie Pope Cherry. Survivors include his son and daughter -in -law, Dr. Thomas and Mil Frederiksen- Cherry of Littleton, Colo.; a daughter, Elizabeth Ann Cherry of College Station; two broth- ers, Robert Cherry of College Station and Fred Cherry of New Waverly; and three grandchildren. Memorials may be made to A &M United Methodist Church or the American Heart Association. Eagle Staff Report Tom D. Cherry, vice president emeritus for business affairs at Texas A &M University, died Sat- urday following a long illness. He was vice president from 1962 until his retirement in 1976. A native of New Waverly, Texas, Cherry received a bachelor's degree from Sam Houston State Teachers College and a masters in marketing and finance from Texas A &M in 1938. He was appointed to the fac- ulty in the Depat tuient of Agri- cultural Economics at A &M, where he taught until 1941. He served as director of eco- nomic research for the Texas Engineering Experiment Station, a. new research position appoint- ed by then -Dean of Engineer - ing,Gibb Gilchrist. As director, he published two bulletins that analyzed the eco- nomic effects of the freight -rate discrimination against the South. When the Civil War ended, a freight -rate structure was created that would prohibit industrial development in the South and that would facilitate the trans- portation of the South's raw materials to the Northern states for converting into textiles, cloth- ing, shoes and other manufac- tured goods. The two bulletins contributed to the successful CHERRY Page A7 Business affairs pioneer served A &M until 1976 efforts in getting the nation's freight -rate structure revised. During World War II, Cherry was an official of A.O. Smith Corp. at the Houston Ship Chan- nel engaged in constructing war materials, including concrete landing ships. After the war, he worked for TransWorld Airlines in various administrative posi- tions in the New York corporate offices until rejoining the Texas A &M staff in 1962. Cherry served in leadership positions for numerous educa- tional and governmental projects in conjunction with Texas A &M. He is past president of the Coun- cil for Business Affairs for the National Association of State Universities and Land -Grant Col- leges and the Texas Association of State Senior College and Uni- versity Business Officers, of which he was a co- founder. In 1983, he was presented the Texas Association of State Senior College and University Business Officers' Distinguished Achieve- ment Award. He served as an adviser to the Coordinating Board, Texas Col- lege and University System, in the development of formula fund- ing for higher education and served the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools as a con- sultant in rewriting its reaccredi- tation manual. Cherry also served on the com- mittee appointed by Gov. Dolph Briscoe to evaluate and recom- mend organizational procedures of the executive branch of state government. • L r(y Facck(4 4- S Wo F S+a_.c Shy o-,ry ? ? D . S , V\ •A <•••-• • �axv�Cv w° S - or , \ . Leo r) Page 2 TEXAS FOREST NEWS Vol. 30 July - August, 1951 No. 4 Published bi- monthly by the Texas Forest Service, a part of the Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College System: College Station. Texas, U. S. Forest Service coeperatng. Gibb Gilchrist, Chancellor, the Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College System. Entered as second -class matter, Dec. 9, 1949. at the Post Office at College 912Station, Texas. under the Act of A» E. R. War- Editor u)" E/e\ „It —Head, Forest Department oung —Head, Forest Management Department Newspapers and other publications are o publish, either with or without credit, Inv article appearing n this publi cat Johnny Helps Smokey Bear 'rsonnel vice ....Director ive PREVEN .artment .. est�Fire FOREST FIRES - Johnny 8 Smokey say : "BREAK YOUR MATCH IN TWO!" "BE SURE YOUR CIGARETTE IS OUT!" Smokey, the forest fire prevention bear, recruits the aid of Johnny in his educational program. The Phillip Morris Company has distributed the above poster in color throughout the country as a public service to remind smokers to use precautions. TEXAS FOREST NEWS Workshops Hear Weaver Talk Teachers in 1:i resource -use educa- tion workshops have heard Texas Forest Service consultants during the 1951 summer terms. A ge Howard Weaver, assistant forestry educator, of the Texas Forest Service is shown conducting a resource -use education work:tnop for vocational agriculture teachers at Sam Houston State College h; . Huntsville. I T Forestry inst& action for teachers emphasizes the integration f curriculum. . in the regular Teachers are s },'wn how to use for- estry topics and materials in social studies, language arts, science, math- ematics and other subjects. Begun in four colleges in 1946, the program of participation in teachers' workshops ha? . adily increased. This is but one phase of the Texas Forest Service school program; it also in- cludes year - r o u n d assistance to schools in curri,...um planning, teach- er- training in resource -use education and organization of instructional ma- terial. The Texas colleges and universities hearing Texas F. "-est Service consult- ants during the 1951 summer terms include Texas Sluthern University, Houston; University of Houston; Sam Houston State College, Huntsville; East Texas State College, Commerce; Texas College, Tyler; Texas A. & M., College Station, Sul Ross Camp (Camp Lobo) I •.. Davis; Sul Ross College, Alpine; Paul Quinn College, Waco; Prairie Vitw A. & M., Hemp- stead; Wiley College, Marshall; Til- lotson College, :,ustin; and Butler College, Tyler. NEWS About Foresters COVER i Paul W. Schoen, who for the past six years has served as executive sec- retary of the Forest Farmers Asso- ciation, announced his resignation to become Washington representative of the American Pulp and Paper Asso- ciation and the American Pulpwood Association effective September 1. Schoen was formerly employed by the Texas Forest Service. Robert Strauss accepted an ap- pointment with - the Texas Forest Service as assistant district forester at Lufkin effective June 11. Strauss is a Navy veteran, having served two years in the Pacific theater. He is married and has one child. Strauss replaces Charles T. Stealey Jr., who was transferred to Conroe as district (Continued on Page 6) Governor Allan Shivers and Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Siecke view the plaque presented to the Texas Forest Se --vic" by the Texas '-''nr.'atry Asso- ciation at the dedication of the E. O. iecke State Forest near Kirbyville my 18. The plaque was unveiled y Mrs. Siecke. Governor Shivers as one of the principal speakers at the dedication ceremony. The dedication was scheduled to coincide with the annual summer for- estry camp for 4 -H club and FFA boys sponsored jointly by the Texas Forest Service and the Texas For- estry Association. These young tree farmers attended the dedication cere- mony. The E. O. Siecke State Forest sign can be seen at the extreme right. or Shivers Speaks Govern at Dedication of Siecke Forest E. 0. Siecke of College Station, who served as head of the Texas Forest Service for 25 of its 36 years, was honored July 18 when a state forest near Kirbyville was dedicated in his name. Dedication ceremonies - .vere held on the state forest site about five miles southeast of Kirbyville in Ne County. Governor Allan Shivers, a native of the pineywoods region, spoke at the dedication ceremonies. Governor Shivers was introduced by Senator Ottis E. Lock. Paul F. Hursey, Jasper, president of the Texas Forestry Association, presided. The Reverend J. T. Moore, pastor of the First Methodist Church at Jasper, gave the invocation opening the ceremonies. Other talks were given by H. M. Seaman, Houston, vice president of the Kirby Lumber Corporation; A. E. Cudlipp, Lufkin, a member of the Board of Directors of the Texas Governor Allan Shivers speaking at the dedication ceremony of the E. 0. Siecke State Forest, July 18. A. & M. College System; and A. D. Folweiler, director of the Texas For- est Service. Mr. Siecke served as state forester from 1917 to 1942. Prior to 1917 he was deputy state forester of Oregon and served on the faculties of the Oregon Agricultural College and the State College of Washington. He was also employed by the U. S. Forest Service for four years. Mr. Siecke retired in 1942. A bronze plaque, presented by the Texas Forestry Association in honor of Mr. Siecke, was unveiled by Mrs. Siecke. The inscription on the plaque read as follows: "This forest, de- voted to research and demonstration of commercial timber growing, is named in honor of E. 0. Siecke, a pioneer forester and for twenty -five years director of the Texas Forest Service, Texas A. & M. College Sys- tem. TEXAS FOREST NEWS In recognition of Siecke's contribu- tion to the advan. ement of forest conservation and wise use, the Texas Forestry Association places this plaque and hereby restates its dedi- cation to an economy of timber abun- dance for present a future Texans. 1951." Mrs. Siecke read the inscription on the plaque to approximately 250 friends of Mr. Siecke who had weath- ered the blistering heat. The dedication was scheduled to coincide with the 1''restry camp for 4 -H club and FF. t .toys, sponsored jointly by the Texas Forestry Asso- ciation and the Texas Forest Service. This is one of tht(five state forests operated by the Te7.os Forest Service (Continued on Page 5) C. L. Ric Resi C. L. Rich Page 3, C. L. Rich, visual aids specialist with the Texas Forest Service, has submitted his resignation effective September 1, s o that he can contin- ue in the teaching profession. Rich has accepted a position as high school science teacher at Love - lady in Houston County. He will also serve as visual aids coor- dinator for t h e Lovelady schools. Rich leaves after completing four years with the Texas Forest Service. In this period as assistant forestry educator, he completed numerous mo- tion pictures, slides, still photographs, exhibits and other visual aids. The most recent motion pictures completed by Rich include "Texas Tree Farmer," "Texas Wooden Riches" and "Burning Texas Dollars." Before coming to the Texas 'Forest Service, Rich taught school at Conroe in Montgomery County. While at Lovelady, he plans to complete his graduate work during the summer months at Sam Houston State College in Huntsville. E. 0. Siecke making his response at the dedication of the state forest in his honor. vest cutting, wood preservation, for- est protection, tree planting and for- est management. Instructors included graduate for- esters from the Texas Forest Service and private industries. They were E. D. Marshall, M. V. Dunmire, Rob- ert Rhodes, Howard Weaver, Mason Cloud and Don Austin of the Texas Forest Service; Bruce Stewart, Inde- pendent Pulpwood Producers, Inc.; Bill Kellogg, Foster Estates; John W. Read and J. R. Misch, Southwestern Settlement and Development Corpora- tion; Ralph Davis, Southern Pulpwood Conservation Association; and Emil Mueller, International Paper Com- pany. E. R. Wagoner, Texas Forest Service, served as camp director for both camps. The instructors were assisted by 15 adult leaders from the Agricultural Extension Service and the Vocational Agriculture Department. These lead- ers and counties they represent were J. D. Handley Jr., Liberty; T. G. Hem - by, Trinity; Otho Harcrow, Trinity; Bernard Crawford, Jasper; John Moos - berg, Shelby; Robert Ross, Mont- gomery; Lynn Griffin, Anderson; W. S. Dalby, Bowie; Metz Heald, Cherokee; J. A. Steele, Smith; Richard Dennis, Nacogdoches; Glenn Speer, Bowie; John O'Keefe, Anderson; and Al Evans, Cherokee. Floyd Lynch, state 4 -H club leader; A. H. Karcher, assistant state 4 -H club leader; Wal- ter S. Scott, district extension agent; and J. H. Surovik, assistant district extension agent, assisted at the camps to supervise group leadership instruc- Vocational agriculture teachers and Extension Service personnel serving as adult leaders assisted the instructors and the camp staff with administrative details. The Camp Tyler adult leaders are shown above. Left to right, front row, they are A. H. Steele, Smith; W. S. Dalby, Bowie; John O'Keefe, Anderson; Richard Dennis, Nacogdoches; Herman Walters, Morris; back row, Lynn Griffin, Anderson; Glenn Speer, Bowie; Al Evans, Cherokee; Metz Heald, Cherokee; A. H. Karcher, College Station. TEXAS FOREST NEWS E. D. Marshall, head of the Forest Products Department of the Texas Forest Service, conducting a class on wood preservation at Kirbyville. A similar class was conducted at Camp Tyler. tion. Dr. George Donaldson, director of Camp Tyler for the Tyler Public School System, also assisted with the administration of Camp Tyler. Joseph Berger, a . 7.;-year-old native of Switzerland, wa:'! a guest at Camp Tyler. Berger is an international farm youth exchange delegate. He arrived in New York June 4 and will return to Switzerland after spending most of his six me nths tour at Na- cogdoches. Berger is residing with Steve Lilly, a Nacogdoches dairy farmer. Berger entertained the camp- ers at Tyler with a slide lecture. He used colored slides of Swiss farming practices and Swiss scenes to illustrate his talk. Ed ^rational forestry films were used on oth- er evening programs. In one evening at each camp monetary prizes were awarded to indi- vidu: is and groups dis- playi,ig the most inter - esting skits. Ca.upers were organ- ized into four groups; namely, foresters, rangers, stumpers a bucks rs. These gro competed with e other in various athl tic evens including swim- ming, baseball, volley- ball, horseshoes a & d washers. Page 5 1951 -53 Appropriations Are Announced for Texas Forest Ser vise The recent session of the State Leg- islature appropriated $1,145,126 for the Texas Forest Service for the 1951 -53 biennium, commencing Sep- tember 1. This is in contrast to an appropriation of $750,000 which was received for the previous two -year period. This represents an increase of 52 per cent. The new appropriation will be di- vided as follows: for the fiscal year 1952, $586,313 and for 1953, $558,813. Approximately 80 per cent of the in- creased appropriation will be spent to add 800,000 acres to the area under protection against fires and increase the effectiveness of forest fire control activities in the 7', million acres already under some protection. Ex- pansion of nursery facilities to meet increasing need for forest tree seed- lings and research work in a coopera- ve southwide plan for forest tree improvement is a planned. D('(IiC(llion— (Continued from Page 3) and used primarily for research and demonstration purposes. The cere- mony was held in a pine plantation established in 1926 on the 1722 -acre state forest. ON THIS PAGE AND THE ONE FOLLOWING ARE FOUR EDITORIALS Fii= THE FOUR LEADING NEWSPAPERS OF TEXAS. They ARE DIRE TREASURED THAN THE REST OF THE 1 ATERIAL IN THIS VOLLaE. DALLAS 1 L:,5 10- 1b -4 E.O.S. Farewell to E. 0. Siecke In the retirement of E. 0. Siecke, director of the Texas Forest Service, the state suffers a se- vere loss in a field in which Texas has steadily made notable progress ever since forestry work was launched along modern lines back in 1918. At that time young Siecke, fresh from the forests of the Pacific Coast and full of enthusiasm for putting into practice in Texas fire prevention and reforestation methods found successful elsewhere, succeeded in setting up slowly but steadily one of the nation's finest and most efficient forest serv- ices any state can point to. With timely aid from a legislature which he succeeded in convincing that forestry was just as essential to certain areas as agriculture, Siecke brought into a powerful working organization some of the state's most forward-looking landowners, industrialists, back- woods farmers and educators, whose loyal co -op- eration made possible the results obtained in the twenty -five years of his administration. The fact that Texas forests today are able to supply the war effort with some two billion board -feet of lumber annually, without suffering irreparable loss, is a tribute to Siecke's admirable program and his organizational ability. He will be missed. In W. E. White, who for fifteen years served under Siecke as fire prevention chief and vice - director, the work of the Texas Forest Service will go on efficiently when he assumes the duties of director. The war brings many new problems and complications which will require special attention. Forests are one of Texas' greatest natural assets, as chemical and other uses of wood are opening a new era challenging iron, steel and other metals, and presaging a development unlike any- thing that ever went before. It is hoped that Di- rector White will receive the same wholehearted support for the cause of forestry that his prede- cessor received. HOUSTON CHRONICLE 7 •21 •51 Green Monument A 1722 -ACRE forest near Kirbyville has been dedicated as a perpetual live monument to E. 0. Siecke, head of the Texas Forest Service from 1918 to 1942 and now retired. Practically all the first steps in the reclaim- ing of Texas forests were taken under Siecke's leader- ship. His biggest task was to overcome the indifference of property owners. He ac- complished it by patience and good - natured -persistence. Now, a generation after Siecke began his forestry work in the state, Texas has more acreage in scientifically planned and managed tree farms than any other state. Land otherwise useless has been turned into profitable use. Besides having the E. 0. Siecke State Forest named for•him, the ex- forester has been named president emeritus of the Texas Forestry Association. At the new forest dedication were two for- mer presidents of the association from Houston, H. M. Seaman and N. D. Canterbury. The prin- cipal address was made by Gov- ernor Shivers. The many hon- ors awarded to Forester Siecke were earned by work that will continue to benefit Texas and the nation. SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS 7-14-51 Dedication of Siecke State Forest A milestone in the history of the organ- ized forestry movement in Texas will be marked at Kirbyville, (Newton County) on July 18. Then Governor Shivers and a citizen group, including outstanding foresters, will dedicate E. 0. Siecke State Forest. That 1,722 -acre tract, the first of five woodland areas that Texas Forest Service has acquired for demonstration purposes —that is, for teaching Texas land - owners how to grow tree crops, by object- lesson— has been renamed for its founder. Mr. Siecke was director of Texas For- est Service through 25 of its 36 years thus far (1917 -42). He saw that agency grow from modest beginnings into a strong organization that has spread the principles and practices of sound for- estry throughout the Pine Belt and beyond. Under his direction, the Service arranged to maintain watch over 9 mil- lion acres of pinelands, so as to detect and promptly extinguish fires. With 75 lookout towers, some 1 800 miles of tele- phone line and 2,800 miles of automo- bile roads —with sturdy assistance from volunteer watchers and fighters, includ- ing Texas Air Patrol —that Service ma- terially has reduced the ravages of fire in the pinelands. The Tree Farms movement also found an enthusiastic supporter in Mr. Siecke. Today some 21 million acres of pine - lands are included in 150 "farms" which grow trees as a crop, regularly harvested and replanted. The coming of the woodpulp indus- tries— notably Southland Mills, that make newsprint paper —has given Texas pines new importance as a money crop. For such uses, the slash pine, introduced from the Southeast, has proved well- adapted. DALLAS NEWS 7 -22 -51 HOUSTON POST 7 - -51 Siecke Forest Dedication of the • E. 0. Siecke State Forest in the piney woods of East Texas is a graceful recognition of the fruitful labors of Mr Siecke in the cause of Texas forestry. Mr Siedke was the directing head of the Texas Forest Service for a quarter of a century —from 1917 to 1942. He was no ordinary administrator. He preached the gospel of good forestry practices and the conservation of the state's woodland re- sources with fervor and conviction. In- spired by his zeal, and impressed by the common sense of his arguments, Texans have made great strides in the systematic cultivation of trees, in the protection of forests and in scientific lumbering. The 1700 -acre forest near Kirbyville will perpetuate the memory of his good works. This was one of those all- too -rare instances of "flowers for the living." Mr Siecke was present at the ceremony to see Mrs Siecke unveil the forest marker, and to hear the well- deserved tributes paid to his achievements by Gov Allan Shivers, H. M. Seaman of Houston, past president of Texas Forest Association, and others. Siecke Forest Twenty or thirty years ago there were rash statements, almost hysterical, about Texas' forests playing out. Nature has its own scheme of survival. But it is true in a day of intense cutting and in- tense manufacturing that supplementary seeding is necessary. The generally good condition of Texas' most important commercial timber belt — covering thirty -six counties in East Texas —is due in no small measure to E. 0.. Slecke. He was head of the Texas Forest Service twenty -five years and 1s now retired. HIs efforts at reseeding and conservation complemented the new che- murgic development of wood cellulose as a basis for a score of industries. Whether the 11 million acres of pine In that region will yet prove to be its most valuable resource depends on chemical discovery and utilization. Chemistry could yet dictate that the 65 million acres of mesquite, cedar and post oak will be more valuable. But, ir- respective of what science holds, Mr. Siecke's tireless work in Texas can not be forgotten. The rededication of a 1,720- aore state forest near Kirbyville as the E. 0. Siecke State Forest is timely and merited. VOL. 9, NO. 3 THOMAS L. CARTER Current annual ad valorem taxes paid to various local gov- ernment agencies in East Texas by 11 forest industry members of the Texas Forestry Associ- TEXAS FORESTS and TEXANS The Voice of Forestry in Texas 1914 — Observing 54 Years of Continuous Service to Texas and Texans — 1968 TEXAS FORESTRY ASSOCIATION, LUFKIN, TEXAS U.S. Plywood- Champion Will Acquire W.T. Carter Holdings KARL R. BENDETSEN 11 Firms Pick Up Bag Land Tax Tab dition to their payment of in- come taxes, sales taxes and franchise taxes. Approximately 140,000 other East Texas tim- berland owners nay additional U. S. Plywood- Champion Pa- pers, Inc. has reached an agree- ment to acquire approximately 180,000 acres of timberland and certain other assets from W. T. Carter and Brother in East Texas, it was announced March 28 by Karl R. Bendet- sen, chairman U. S. Plywood - Champion Papers and Thomas L. Carter, managing partner, W. T. Carter and Brother. Lands involved are located pri- marily in Polk, San Jacinto and Liberty counties. Terms of the transaction, which is subject to favorable tax rulings, were not disclosed. Other properties involved in- cluded a sawmill, lumber fin- ishing operation, and other fa- cilities. Gene C. Brewer, president, said that U.S. Plywood- Champ- ion Papers plans to expand tim- ber and lumber production at Camden and to continue W. T. Carter and Brother's plant modernization and program im- provement of product quality and customer service. The plant expansion could include the manufacture of other wood pro- ducts, Brewer said. Thomas L. Carter, managing partner of the W. T. Carter & Bro., said his firm will continue GEORGE WACHTER MAY -JUNE, 1968 George Wachter To ation totaled $4,6O ),`J1U iii Ivo'. "East Texas tree farmers pay ad valorem taxes on each acre of timberland to several different taxing jurisdictions. School districts received the largest share of the timberland owners' tax payments," ac- cording to E. R. Wagoner, exe- cutive director, Texas Forestry Association, Lufkin. "State, counties, road dis- tricts, wat r districts, hospital districts, and other local taxing jurisdictions received their share of the timberland tax payments." The ad valorem taxes paidby these 11 Texas Forestry Asso- ciation industrial members, who own approximately 28 per- cent of the commercial timber- land of East Texas, was in ad- NEW MAYOR D. A. Anderson, head of the Information and Education Di- vision, Texas Forest Service, was re- elected Mayor of Col- lege Station on Tuesday, April 2 by a record 1,095 votes com- pared to 460 for his opponent. Twenty -nine East Texas FFA and 4 -H Club teams attended the 1968 State Woodland Clinic in Nacogdoches, April 6. The Clinic, held on the Ste- phen F. Austin State College experimental forest, is spon- sored by the Soil and Water Conservation Districts, Texas Forestry Association, U.S. Forest Service, and the School of Forestry at SFA. The FFA team from Union Grove High School won first place, Robert E. Lee High School, Tyler, second, and Hughes Springs High School, third. Trinity High School won first in the 4 -H division, followed by Camden Elementary School and Bleekwood Junior High. au V611J1 ell! 1. C J. - Ia.V , UDC 161,850 employees of timber based activities in Texas con- tribute large sums in their own tax payments. Wagoner said ad valorem tax- es on timberland, like other costs, must be paid out of the productivity of the property. "Taxes paid on young timber are an advance paid to the tax gatherer before there is any income to meet it. Tree farm- ers pay ad valorem taxes every year for 40 years while waiting for their trees to mature as sawlogs," he said. "Fair tax policies will en- courage Texas to move forward toward its full potential econo- mic development. Unwise tax policies might well be the ruin- ation of the tree farmer if all these many assessments be- come too high. Any tax policy that discourages reforestation and good forest management is not in the best public interest," Wagoner said. "We believe that forests are more important as a source of raw material and permanent payrolls." 29 FFA Teams Take Part In Annual Clinic Mike Culpepper of the Rob- ert E. Lee team took the high point place in the FFA division, and Leslie Clark of the Orange County 4 -H was high pointer in the 4-H division. Texas Forestry Association Vice President J. R. Miesch presented the trophies and plaques. Each of the 23 FFA teams and six 4 -H teams represent- ing 23 public schools from the forest area of Texas were win- ners of the local contest. Albert Smith and Larry Brink, Soil Conservation Ser- vice, assisted in local contest and carrying out the clinic. Dr. Eugene F. Hastings, recreation specialist at SFA, coordinated the program. rights and certain timnerlanus not included in the transaction. The late W. T. Carter began business in 1876 and founded the firm in 1883. He also found- ed the town of Camden, about 90 miles northeast of Houston, in 1898. Thomas L. Carter is the third managing partner of W. T. Carter. The others were his father, A. L. Carter, and his grandfather who founded the firm. Brewer and Carter assured W. T. Carter and Brother's customer of a continued and expanded source of supply, with l u m b e r sales being handled through Carter's sales office in Houston. E.O. Siecke Celebrates Anniversary E. O. Siecke, 85- year -old president - emeritus, Texas Forestry Association, Galves- ton, recently celebrated the 50th anniversary of his employment as State Forester of Texas. Mr. Siecke's half century of service to Texas and Texans was observed at a dinner in Gal- veston arranged by friends in his honor. Prior to his retirement in 1942, Mr. Siecke compiled an impressive record of forestry service. He served as State Forester of Texas for 25 years. He has been a member of the Texas Forestry Association since 1918, served as TFA sec- retary for 19 years, and has been president- ermitus since 1950. The 1722 -acre state for- est at Kirbyville was named for him and dedicated on July 18, 1951 by the Texas Forestry Association. Siecke was the first forester in Texas to become a Fellow in the Society of American For- esters. Keynote i r ti ivieeL George Wachter, vice presi- dent, U. S. Plywood- Champion Papers, Inc., Hamilton, Ohio, will be the key speaker at the Spring Meeting of the Texas Forestry Association, May 22, at S t a n c i l Memorial Park, Cleveland, Texas. Wachter will discuss "New Developments in Harvesting and Utilization." An extensive forestry equip- ment demonstration featuring the latest log loaders, skidders, chain saws, and other woods equipment will be a star attrac- tion of the meeting, according to J. F. McAdams, Cleveland, TFA First Vice President and Chairman of the 1968 TFA Spring Meeting Committee. The Association will present two special awards at the meet- ing. In addition to McAdams, members of the Spring Meeting Committee are Spencer Knut- son, Diboll; Rip Byrd, Hunts- ville; E. A. Golden, Huntsville; Cary Williams, Cleveland; Carlton S. Yee, Nacogdoches; Henry Steitz, Conroe; H. P. Coleman, Splendora; Georg e Roesner, Houston; Willis Webb, m► E. O. SIECKE TFA President - Emeritus Steve Sadler, Pat Malone, Tom- my Boothe and R. B. Boyette, Cleveland. The meeting will convene at 10 a.m. James L. Love, Diboll, TFA president, will preside. The public is invited. TFA Gets Tree For First Lady The Texas Forestry Asso- ciation purchased a magnolia as a contribution to the State's First Lady, Nellie Connally's project to landscape the grounds of the Texas Executive Man- sion. Nearly 1,500 of the more than 4,000 contributors to the landscaping project toured the freshly refurbished mansion grounds on Sunday, March 17. Governor and Mrs. Connally greeted each guest and pre- sented each contributor with a pecan wood souvenir from a tree on the mansion grounds struck by lightning before the project began. Printed in "bluebonnet blue" ink, each block declared, "Thank you for your part in helping c r eat e Texas' most beautiful garden," and carried Mrs. Connally's signature. TFA HAS ITEMS AT HEMISFAIR The Texas Forestry Asso- ciation has loaned several pieces of forestry equipment for display at the HemisFair in San Antonio. The items in- clude lumbering hand tools and skid hooks which are exhibited in the Institute of Texan Cul- tures Building. The items are from the museum collection housed in recent years by the Forestry School at Stephen F. Austin State College for TFA. CITY OF COLLEGE STATION ursday, July 15, 1999 The Bryan - College Station Eagle Page All Elsie Druckhammer Patranella Sauer • Feb. 1, 1905 - July 13, 1999 Services for Elsie Sauer, 94, of College Station are set for 2:00 p.m. Thursday July 15, 1999 at Southwood Funeral Home. The Rev. Tom Huser will officiate. Burial will be at the College Station Cemetery. Visitation at the funeral home will start at 10:00 a.m. Thursday. Mrs. Sauer died July 13, at the College Station Medical Center after a long illness. She was born in Washington on the Brazos and lived her early years in Brenham, Texas. Her parents were Wilhelm and Sophie Druckhammer. She was one of 9 children. In 1924 she married Luke Patranella and moved to Brazos County. Mrs. Sauer was among the early residents of College Station, moving to Jersey Street in 1993. In the late 20's and early 30's she served as secretary to football coach D.X. Bible. In the late 40's and early 50's she was a salesman for and manager of radio station WTAW, then owned and operated by Texas A &M. In the late 50's and early 60's she was Administrative Assistant to the Director of the Memorial Student Center at TAMU. In 1965, Mrs. Sauer retired from Texas A &M and married Lt. Col. Edward F. Sauer. Mrs. Sauer was a charter member of the A&M Presbyterian Church. She was known as an outstanding cook and entertainer. She was loved by many. While in her 80's, she authored a cook book with favorite family recipes. She was an avid deer hunter and got great pleasure from taking her grandchildren hunting. She continued to hunt well into her eighties. She was preceded in death by her first husband Luke M. Patranella and by her second husband Col E. F. Sauer. Survivors include a daughter and son -in -law Joyce and Dick Birdwell of College Station and her grandchildren, Rick and Mary Birdwell of Kaula Lumpa, Malaysia, Robert and Linda Birdwell of College Station, Randy and Joni Birdwell of The Woodlands, Michael and Rhonda Neel of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Rusty Birdwell of Dallas and 11 great - grandchildren. She is also survived by two sisters, Mrs. Charles Schoedel of Bryan and Mrs. Rupert Green of College Station. Memorials may be made to the A &M Presbyterian Church, 301 Church Street, College Station, Texas 77840. Elsie Druckhammer Patranella Sauer Feb. 1, 1905 — July 13, 1999 Services for Elsie Druckhammer Patranella Sauer, 94, of College Sta- tion are set for 2 p.m. Thursday at Southwood Funeral Home. The Rev. Tom Huser of Trinity Presbyterian Church will offici- ate. Burial will be in College Sta- tion Cemetery. Visitation will be from 10 a.m. to the time of the services Thurs- day at the funer- al home. Mrs. Sauer died Tuesday in Col- lege Station Medical Center. She was born in Washington -on- the- Brazos, was the manager of WTAW radio station, and was among the early residents of College Sta- tion. She was a secretary to football coach D.X. Bible, a WTAW salesman and manager and was the adminis- trative assistant to the director of the Memorial Student Center. She was a charter member of A &M Pres- byterian Church. She was preceded in death by her first husband, Luke M. Patranella, and her second husband, Col. E.F. Sauer. Survivors include a daughter and son -in -law, Joyce and Dick Birdwell of College Station; two sisters, Mrs. Charles Scheodel of Bryan, and Mrs. Rupert Green of College Sta- tion; five grandchildren; and 11 araat- Grandchildren. SAUER Memorials may be made to A &M Presbyterian Church, 301 Church St., College Station, Texas 77840. • • • / / -/ • 98 Pattie Orlie Minkert Caddess Pattie Orlie Minkert Caddess, a lifetime resident of Brazos County, went to her reward on November 12, 1998. Patti was the wife of Harvey Caddess. Patti Caddess is survived by her son, Hugh (Hoopy) Caddess, his wife, Ana, two granddaughters, and three great grandchildren. Hugh and his wife live in Brownsville, Texas. The older grand- daughter, Melissa fein, her husband Aaron, and daughters Abra and Mira, live in Gaithersburg, Maryland. The younger granddaughter, Jill Brode, her husband John and son Karl, live in Big Spring, Texas. Ana Caddess has married children, Jaye Hsia of Los Angeles, California, Shifra Birnbaum of San Antonio, and Philip Borenstein of Boston, Massachusetts. Patti was preceded in death by her parents, Jessie G. and Frances Minkert; brothers, William E Minkert and J. Gary Minkert and J Gary Minkert; sisters, Myrle Hudson and Helen Montgomery. Patti was active in many local organiza- tions during her life. Among them were the First Baptist church of Bryan, Lois Sunday School Class; Friends of the Library, a registrar in the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Mechanical Engineering Wives Club, A &M Mothers Club, and the Brazos Heritage Society to name a few. She was a judge in all local elections for over 20 years. Among Patti's many talents were poetry, art, photography, music, and she was a great historian. Funeral services will be held 2pm today, at the First Baptist Church of Bryan with Dr. Tim Owens officiating. Interment will follow in bryan City Cemetery. Hillier Funeral Home is in charge of the arrange- ments. ) el145 LI kov. a4 fib dit-- / 6112 ,--6 Lii 461Tt4tirk -,- • r • 41 ' Afklidloyd, p iI� / 1 ,, '4i 4*' 4 (P1 / I I'/ I I / ' S a' / a 'Li ‘i.J. / *PS 4/... g ..- # ' a / "ri. 'Flt 7v6rm, 97 f ert • Lkai 3 .416w- 4 11) /140. __,4;ed,rktrn:/ac-. VtittOiv,a4, 1 cn J 4 av4A) , NAY v ie d ,!1 • L _$r ,00ettdv . , , 71*„ 4;#.4J f ' • - ------ • ---------'` - • • -- Mr. Paul McKay Bryan Eagle Bryan, Texas 77805 TEXAS A &M UNIVERSITY Professor D.G. Woodcock Architecture Texas A &M University College Station, Texas 77843 Dr. Paul Van Riper c/o English Department Texas A &M University College Station, Texas 77843 Gentlemen: DEPARTMENT OF ENTOMOLOGY COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS 77843 -2475 AC 409- 845 -2516 October 21, 1986 I've worked up a rather badly done map of housing on the 1935 A &M Campus; and made a list of the luminaries who frequented those homes, and what each was about at the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. I was prompted to do this after reading the section on Historic Architecture in the recently published BRAZOS COUNTY HISTORY. Some of the material on A &M Campus housing doesn't square with my experience, and with a 1935 Bryan - College Station phone book I have. For example ... Page 364: Marburger House -- This house at 222 Lamar was occupied by Dr. and Mrs. Mark Francis. In 1935 they had likely lived there for many years; Francis had come to the College before 1900. B.D. Marburger, a civil engineer lived not on Lamar but on Houston: 210 Houston Street. Marburger had lived there at least from the early '20s at 210 Houston. In any case, I'm curious how the Mark Francis home got labelled Marburger. Also in the narrative on page 364 there is mention of the sales of A &M houses starting in 1930. That wasn't the case. The purchase and removal of houses at the College followed the word of banishment that was announced in 1938 to the little colony on the A &M campus. Many could'nt believe it at first. Cheap and convenient, the J.K. Walker residence on Lubbock for example -- a five room New England bungalow -- brought $15 per month rent; should you have been so fortunate as to have been residing in campus housing in 1910, and had remained there, you paid no rent in 1938; and in 1938 there were a few on the campus still grandfathered into this largesse. In any event the gravy train was over in 1938. College of Agriculture Texas Agricultural Experiment Station Texas Agricultural Extension Service Mr. Paul McKay Professor D.G. Woodcock Dr. Paul Van Riper October 21, 1986 Page 2 In 1940 -1941 the diaspora was frantically underway, and perhaps in late 1940 the first of the campus houses were purchased and moved; by the middle of 1941 they had begun carting them off seriously. Time was running out in 1941. World War II would shut down building completely. The J.K. Walkers remove was on July 4, 1940 and we were one of the first families to leave the campus. The radio was the last item for the movers to consider that day ... father was determined to never be more than five minutes away from news bulletins. In many ways the collapse of Europe that summer brought a far darker hour than Pearl Harbor. There seemed no hope at all as I remember now. We didn't take the New England bungalow with us that July 4 -- instead father had built a home in the newly opened subdivision of North Oakwood. Page 366: Spence - Bolton House -- This house was not located at the Rudder Tower site. It was on Throckmorton. The Rudder Tower is located on Lubbock Street (Joe Routt) and covers parts of the space once occupied by Guion Hall and the J.K. Walker residence. Page 39: Quality Row House -- This house, owned by Former Students Association, was occupied all during the 1930's by E.E. and Julia M. Quillen and daughter Judy. Students didn't live there. McQuillen was executive secretary for Former Students. About 1926 Ike Ashburn and family had resided at this home on 220 Lamar; but his wife suddenly and tragically died. Ashburn resigned his position as secre- tary for Former Students and took employment elsewhere. He returned to A &M once more in the 1930s. It is possible that between the departure of Ashburn and the arrival of the McQuillens, in the late '20s, students could have lived at the home. But they were not there in the '30s. Those are several items that I wanted to comment on. I would add a few words about "Quality Row ". While in A &M's more formative years the seat of power may have rested in the homes near the Drill Field, by 1920 there is a much greater concentration of the stuff on Throckmorton Street. Why, there is not an assistant professor to be seen there. Throckmorton is some distance from the Drill Field. It may not be entirely evident from my bad map and street listings, but there was an ordered segregation in campus housing, segregation even more pro- nounced than that suggested by the absence of assistant professors on Throck- Mr. Paul McKay Professor D.G. Woodcock Dr. Paul Van Riper October 21, 1986 Page 3 morton. All those folks on Ireland and Sulphur Springs were carpenters and painters and plumbers. Only in rare instances were their likes seen on other streets. Such were the times and our ghetto. The phone book I used to establish the locations of residences here arrived at the C.H. Winkler home on Throckmorton in the Fall of '34, joining previous year's directories and recording snippets of various data and information as the years passed. In time, it was put away and forgotten; a few years ago one of the Winkler grandchildren discovered it at the bottom of a trunk, resting there with all of the pressed flowers of yesterday. It is indeed a period piece and a testimonial of that common place: "a simpler time ". But, it was simpler: if there were no yellow pages, who cared? Everybody in the community knew who sold what. You don't need yellow pages in 1935. And fires and crime ...? You simply pick up the receiver of the phone on the hall stand, and when the operator says, "number please ", you ask for the fire station or police. People notoriously record things on phone books. Mrs. Winkler left us with the following mysterious formula on the back of the directory: She left not the slightest hint of what it was used for. 3KW:eaa 1 pt. gas 1 T salt 1 T salt peter 1 g camphor Mix and let stand 24 hrs. Sincerely, J. Knox Walker Professor of Entomology List of Streets and Residences Texas A&M Campus, 1935 J.K. Walker The following is a code of houses and their location at the College. As a child I thought the campus was a place where all employees lived; after putting this together I realize now that, by and large, it was the higher voltage sorts that were enjoying the dirt cheap housing. One had to be in charge of something to avail himself of this perquisite. One exception stands out: Wood Street is occupied in 1935 by staff people who, with a single exception, are teachers only. At other locations also, several other non - administrative types had houses. The USA military, ROTC, teachers, are all on Henderson, with the exception of Col. Emery, Head of Military Science. Emery has made it to Throckmorton. As I have indicated the craftsmen at the College, people Ireland, Sulphur Springs and Ross. Only Albert Haneman has penetrated to the academic west of the campus; Mr. Haneman, head of the carpentry shop, resides on Bell Street. He lives right next to a engineering department head. In 1935 domestics are commonplace on the campus, occupying, in many instances, servant quarters: small homes at the rear of residences. A number of these folks worked for years, and often were part of the family of the staff residing in the campus housing. There is likely little record left of this body of domestics at the College. Commercial laundries have not been fully accepted in 1935, and commonly the laundry process is prosecuted in the backyard where the weeks accumulations of dirty clothes are stewed in great black pots heated by kindling fires. Blueing is an item on everyone's shopping list. Sulphur Springs Road, presumably, derived its name from the lofty wooden 4v5 tower that risen off the road in 1935. A gothic, brooding affair of clapboard, the tower houses the pump that serves the College with its water: it is terrible stuff, laced with hydrogen sulphide; efforts by the power plant to remove the hydrogen sulphide by aerating the water in a kind of out -of -door swimming pool are imperfect, and visitors to the campus often bring their own drinking water (in fairness I should note that people who grew up with the water were oblivious to its sulfurous character). A well of excellent potable water is located near the depot, and a few on the campus visit it twice a week for drinking water. Large cisterns that trap rainwater from roofs are found at several homes. The rail spur on the map had carried the coal to the power plant. But by i93 1-5 the plant should have been switching to natural gas. Some years after the coal era, a steam locomotive, an archaic looking thing then in the 1930s, was dutifully housed in a great elongate garage near the power plant. Campus kids, with impunity, celebrated this machine after its retirement; pulling levers and switches, they thundered down the tracks on some never -never run. I believe the engine was surrendered to that ubiquitous agency, the War Effort, as scrap iron, after '42. c t .7-71/7d N33O6'. W A PHOTOGRAPHIC OF .THE MAP OF COLLEGE PARK, CC' STATION, TEXAS. BRAZOS COUNTY ZCORDS, VOL. 38, PAGE 602 -05 v ti 17 L • Jr .0 C'- / • .Z .2a1 e .41.6I..a, i ..1•z a1 ° • s ate' \' • . .1 SI it ` N I` I " ti q 3 1 vl • T i I I NI. .. a, / Y' , ,n 1 a VI ; l�a ' f1 u n a� 0 wr I L. j (, •• • } .L932I1S• .cs�xl yyss I e a I I • ^ � • e c e I t j w / 7 c • ar 177d-LC 14.72/4N-.7 t R ?� 1.a79JI1L' s ,• ,C7SNd/J/JO .tve%�ir V • t • i 13J✓l9 ` 0 = 2 ~ • I ` as Q • 177./1S' • • • .• r c Y Z J/: ti l r. at as at - (‘-/3 )6 (47 a; t • KEEP THIS MAP FOR YOUR GUIDE IN CHOOSING YOUR LOT. oa" •c n a. ♦ 71 - •-■ IP f. A PHOTOGRAPHIC • — — 7: Z.:N OF THE MAP OF COLLEGE PARK, STATION, TEXAS. 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Sat l D� keno fe ) oh o'r cvelI he . tAecj lef t 5 se e_ 7 always 5PQmeo bah c hrc%8Ms Gr - fo cocvS, or fo a� -e_ uie r- e who li ved cite 4 -/-le 04 n1 Ili< a »euj li fter it l'xaS (,v i t -CI owe S were- pi w i Je abu J_Cf c 11 o 1'' house cyftell (.14 e Ck h ouVAet Q bluebov► he- s. -AA La n kpG1'h die S WiN2 Curs, p 341 roses a0-- u;01 .-For mv) 511.2 WoalcL «Iways place. .111P (AA In au r hreak'4 1 raa 7 e4k as 0 cehfiteriie (V\ oF yinory in d.1-11/-e it S "}' D S C l vu _ SCh 1 . act a 1 ernoo G —1 - PNetnelembrakices A-1ouf vh Ca G V o .&,c vv) -C 44-her wU14/d Tke Tcx a s A d Coksolkd ate ale menTa r Sc ho / or Q5 / — 7 clot A-1/1.e evtA_ 04 w h a t is now Soc Aoull I'c . a'► wa3 0 en c9fllfl!/s I wood \-- k. v K ce. hrc+icl -es -e ver Pre Co 44c calm -er wQ c,uoul_ real aver to 4-A,_ ` aw,i // U r i c vin w � P r� u --e s c 'g w � r a oi 3' o o 510 p,y►'► 14 r ,d9rhsoh fk /� M S Lv f wI nevii c v a c it or o atO t s w i nvii ;ng ?d4 cl dtvl1►ot le sso hS 4Qr GrS : - t - A” were_ igu5h b me m 0.4- f 111-42 ill ot e i e Sw' n . y U - G Ov al ct 4.41 ryl o r i l s /YV\lita part wv cA L s poi/ so c_1 v e v s v►�lis�, s`fi I-e Y'� � in o c (ass-es vof (rcj sTcr b/-e s 0 cur4 -,pws ascros5 -(-1n & rarly -oaf. +rac(cs �fo kyle Ft e k L. Ti Ove rt- near uAcre- -k-ke ecref1,o4 Sp o 1 i 7 LQ rvt-e r r � S sekl were- flf1.Q \norce S hAl mombQt s v r VIQ ?vies . \e\de 41/urhh�r l0 Arfillcv 1--u Java 1 t Q you) our tv s - 14.0 7rs. Q of \)42caus-e__ he_ ohe Ub.o \Qark+pi_ RIDING CLASS MEMBERS HOLD HORSE SHOW CUPS ARE PRESENTED TO WINNERS BY A. & M. ASSOCIATION Members of the Children's Rid- ing Class conducted by the A. & M. College Military Department par- ticipated in a horse show held this morning in the new arena laid out in the woodland plot just off High -1 way No. 6. Major W. R. Irvin.' teacher of the class, was ring- master. Competition was held in three classes, beginners, intermediate and advanced, and cups were present -I ed winners of these groups by the A. & M. Polo association. Mrs.; George F. Moore, wife of Col. Moore, head of the military depart -' ment, made the awards. Judges, who included Lt. Col. 0. E. Beezley, Capt. T. D. Roberts and Jack Days, announced the fol- lowing winners in the three classes: Beginners — Little Miss Betty Lou Jones, first; Little Miss Lillian Klipple, second; James Mil- ler, third, and Tyleen Jensen, fourth. Intermediate —Alma Jean Vance, first; Signe Jakkula, second; Ann Cade, third, and Caroline Adriance, fourth. Advanced —Betty Jo Hale, first; Mitten Howell, second; Betty Joe Cook, third, and Ruth Williams,; fourth. 2 co (411 ckGke_ Ono so ea5 waU< rot, a 1 d nraCticed, als vv► a7%o wear orb 4 € t€xac C-l►(lAkeV\ t vi L . ( ) 0 4 1 vit ek-wie cti ate Winners h.e o in/ e r Co Pktp - TJ,O Cie )9Q au S(l ihbon S. rS+ \'os€ 5)ott) YeknP hPr- Qf- 4le »,'nq( P fIicrt- 5;41-e- 347 sG[-th wPS f o -4ke_ cc 4 #4ls dad . W2 re • was c�wa c t I' riAiile iv\ 4-1,1e_ aVA■vi5 roo a+ reCfep ariS giver lUOVe our OCCI S1onS re1►105( .-Pot C (TEXAS) DAILY EAGLE, Reception is Given To College Group. i At Gilchrist Home President and Mrs. Gibb Gil- christ entertained with a brilliant New Year's reception this after- noon at their home from 3 to 6 o'clock for faculty and staff mem- hers of A. and M. College. Receiving with President and l I Mrs. Gilchrist were Dean and Mrs. { F. C. Bolton, Vice President and I Mrs. D. W. Williams, Dean and Mrs. T. D. Brooks, Dean and Mrs. ' Chas. N. Shepardson, Dean and Mrs. H. W. Barlow, Dean and Mrs. _ M. 'T. Harrington, Dean and Mrs. ' J. W. Rollins, Acting Dean and I Mrs. R. C. Dunn, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Lewis, Dr., and Mrs. Ide P. Trotter, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. An- gell, and Col. aand Mrs. Guy F. M e 1 o y. Assisting in receiving guests were Mesdames Frank An- derson, N. M. McGinnis and J. E. Marsh. In the entire reception suite a gracious profusion of Spring flowers were at vantage points and also centered the tea table. Assisting in the dining room were Misses Betty Jo Hale, Pat Orr, 1 Mary Margaret Darnell, Caroline Adriance, Rut Williams, Peggy Campbell, Laetitia Cofer, Teeny i Anderson, Betty' Vance, Louise Marsh and Mrs. Cedric R. Lan- don. During the reception hours guests were delighted with mus- ical selections of Mrs. Chris Groneman, violinist and Mrs. H. K. Stephenson, pianist. - - - 4 ' u r a31 h1 s U vav ()VAS V e r c1 k ; I d -e v o u &,) h h � n SYY1 l� �, a r) ie �o of 4 /( c01 h, Aa 5 �� /1/i � a 5//L g danc.e-/ cIpSS (for -14/ +14 e Q ## Sued Qy cl of es +11 e Lac,s1e, rbo >M we e C e cL wes.el- II be /, ve. 05-€. p t- LI S pi woaIcI dres -s aka meet a/ hoa se - lak'€. 40 ho51 -{4 ;s class --� li o f 443. L n c f s e r OCr dery ices • 5(2 e e d ra+J e r a�e �, -�- h e p l a n o rco r I r e0/1e 6-e r 4jia± ive_ a/ l 1 O K d � 0 h +1 r e5 hQ Pore_ e_ TA /10ki5 4 Li 5 v Aan o i els y h � 5 cue- r e J �' C 1 h j / r QS 6) co 'fool �a a s 04 us - gae A ear r - 1ddl� o4 the S ty c� e � g v A r � �/ j�, e l� . w h �c l� i S h u w S'� yy � P s h '` s or)Z2� -ffar Jav of SaL“ fi� sfiu �� �� w , e- C�r� Pri�c� Lupo c-or -Vin IS huh vw u l b 4 -01 pracicla /rya P, a - IA was 'U n � � waficlei 4 e Ca J. arCk \hfiv StpSa- � a�� cor CUr rS � s nn -�� wou1S Cv IK Crow) kcoi Sb/s& • ca 14 're lmQwl b YYI of < CO W)/1/0 o v v t 4-A e G t S � 1 P_S e_ vvi o r h/ rl l -Cte 4-14e bk r- 0 S y fr i d a d dk;f/ f4 (-0 SC`loo/ v 0 0 - \ -- In e 1-kql(• ifve Vy\a r C il e i OA r - t - c Cf - } - 1 W► col 1 rows a hl 1 -'4P re-acire 4 4-4 -e_ h o Tr - 0 v ^ s� p o 4-l.e_ oie5$ Aa Il Iv h 9 41( (Qfit u;11J G Tamil b -erihs u p +-L Ste p S / ar rMs waiiin high ih 4 air, b� f S CUU �� �o a �� y �ll� n5 as � °>S BP b sk t 4 (Mt uid S o-( Co(lp e Y71-474,D'7 rr Seau7` ■N mP��fs pj'YIPS an cl T r� U n . en6octed 5/9 5 � / our ha��es �Q hi�y or /� Yt/�e�A�rs o D�►'J help US Jear h « fJ oeif ' ��overS, 5 e u,1 hS �v rci qnJ COokiilS _l revoe r /1/e Canner whose husaI was `n k v e cTo r- +A, P" P irr7 Sig Ttoyi U5 w14--(4 bask' -rvi afrk oTt-PrA. We_ ✓het !vi --lie heLSeynPot I l AC S -Pwtb v� Ha<< Glit Cal/Ylpus IM _r h a n h its k _ I 57 have al 10 as -1--G41( 410s/c Mavhi Air j. j , / J Sv � afr Pq� �vl�o�.1` a P ao IPs s o____ --t--Ar Ckvoat Sfre�e� a (' 7taoi.efriri'ky SGl�r�D�. 1 h /Gc/ udoedi 14441 uiQ //< k--() 'o 1 60(tbh) hose Q � ye r / i; S vnke4/ fr3o/c 410e( ya ; n Kfi S . - , v e - 1- 1 0 4 /1 - t S / n ( -� A ' u � � 5 A:6/0 ofb w at a wo kl CU m VIA u tit w n rew ccp _ vw rkt4 4 el/tYial c_14-(.6v-e _ hp 1/YJ hs cl 4--11 e_ co _e o1,1 o -r �e T-eXaS c;M S c_ 14 v u 4 a 1/ � • s �auo ! cc;fai by }L¢ pupils of r . J. 'CirmArlat 'Conway friday evening, fcbruarp nineteenth 'nineteen hundred and thirty -seven at seven-thirty o'cloch 'Bowie .5chool �uditoriurn • • a �S u Te r / I iccL CaktA uS k ��S Qr-e r or SfiuS- i4k S a t ou,- eA eon cKTor. sLLc . PROGRAM (a) March of the Wee Folk (b) Song of the Pines Dick Yarnell Vacation Time Peggy Wilbanks The Bass Sfnger David Butler (a) A Little March (b) Valse Louise Marsh (a) Easter Morning Hymn (b) The Merry -Go -Round Mary Olive Bullock Rose Petals Dick Yarnell — Mary Ann Munnerlyn (a) A Little Journey (b) Katydid Mary Ann Munnerlvn (a) Marching Together (b) Spring Flowers Betty Benbow Pansies Rosalyn Reynolds Merry Games Just We Two ian aniella Over the Hills The Flower Song Narcissus Gaynor Adair Williams Rolfe Wright Rolfe Preston Rogers Lawson Hopkins Kern Johnson Rolfe Gray Frate Presser Clafflin Ketterer Anna Del Koontz Rosalyn Reynolds — Louise Marsh (a) The Hobby Horse i b) A Ghost Came Creeping Martha Jane Potier (a) The Old Refrain (b) The Avalanche Caroline Sticknev (a) To a Wild Rose (b) Curious Story McDowell Heller Betty Jo Halo Maly Evelyn Anderson Marjorie Moreland Alice Silvey Peggy Paine Evening Chimes Mary Helen Vick Spanish Dance No. 2 Peggy Paine — Alice Silvey Chimes of Love Lucille Thornton (a) Prelude in C Minor 'lb) May Night - Virginia Fairies Violoncello — (a) Song Without Words, Op. 23 (b) My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice Marjorie Steel Hungary Solfegietto Valse Arabesque Thomas Halll Marjorie Steel Ruth McCullough F estival Procession March Thomas Hall — Ruth McCullough Anderton Heller Dennee Baines Lange Nevin Heins Moskowski Heller Rachmaninoff Ward Davidoff Sint Saens Koelling C. P. E. Bach Lack Rathbun 2nd 3rd Supt. TO PARENTS OR GUARDIAN Kindly examine card carefully, sign and return promptly. Please notice each grade and confer with us if you desire informa- tion relative to this report. SIGNATURE 1st Period l tIVALA f•st-X ‘ SL - N-I•srs.ga 4th Period 1 114"A., t-LS=- 5th Period 6th Period Period Period LEGEND A excellent, 90-100; B good, 80-90; C fair, 70-80; D unsatisfactory, 60-70; F failing, below 70. Promoted to c) Rot., irtnri iv, 0 Grade Teacher j & ai. (6onsolitratekt *poi Age Wlementarv, Grattes Report to Parents REPORT OF Grade 19 - S c l .19 1 .4 - 0 JJ Parent or Guardian.4 The Home, the School and the State Should Work Together for the Good of the Child. Teacher \f\ SUBJECTS j Arithmetic Civics w 1 A 2 A 3 ti p1 I Avg. I Grade Exam.T Grade I gel Sem ( Av q 7 - _ Q �S , 4 I 1 I $� � A AID —I 1 Q 6 T 1 I Avg. ( Exam. a 6 Grade l g1 Grae 9 S' ?.ti Sem• Avg. q7 90 Yearly Standing 7 9e) 9 � [ ' 9 � a7 9 v 4 _L s Citizenship A� • � Drawing English A � /to � � µ _ Pr — � /3 A . I �- Cr I Geography - 3- - ii � Q 90 History, T.T. S. H - - 7 . q History, Texas History, Beginners Home Economics - Al Hygiene Music /� _, Pr - -- I o-c� 9 cP • Nature Study - Phonics Physical Ed. Reading A _Pk__ _ e'* 7 7 I A A— Shop Work __ Social Studies K I .- q q 9 g -� I ti- it 5 96 7 Spelling /� I� A ti Writing Days Present A I ,'� Is L'f it 0 0 .. \''- 30 0 ^_ 0 .56 O Days Absent Times Tardy � (7 IW 0 IA I A i 0 � O 6 rlonnr4.ment Pr-rrr I 4 • - ATTITUDE TOWARD WORK 1 Indolent Wastes time Work carelessly done Gives up too easily Shows improvement Very commendable ∎' RECITATION .4 Appears not to try Promotion in danger Inattentive Capable of doing better Shows improvement I, Very satisfactory STANDING BY SIR WEEK'S PERIODS 0 STUDENT ATTITUDES 6 5 6 TO PARENTS OR GUARDIAN • "11 Kindly examine card carefully, sign and return promptly. Please notice each grade and confer with us if you desire informa- tion relative Co this report. SIGNATURE lst. Period - INN/N.kr 2nd. Period 3rd. Period e".".•;t nL DA. 4th_ Period .14 t 5th. Period.. - ali 6th. Period..T.4.4...1..../N.d " 1 LEGEND p . A excellent, 90-100; B good, 80-90; C fair, 70-80; D unsatisfactory, 60-70; F failing, below 70. An average of 90 in a subject, and a gen- nal average in deportment, will exempt a student from semester exa "nati ns in that subject. 'k Promoted to Fietairred—ifh rade 0 p • Teacher Supt. ov..9.jittip, Age Parent or Guardian..e .44 aa Consolibateb ■41111111 t,giSihotttii:41111. • 5ff1ementarR Grabes 411 Report to Parents • The Home, the Work Together REPORT OF School and the State Should . for the Good of the Child. 4 Grade 19 3 • • • Teacher • - r- • - • J -maaa. Spelling Reading Writing Arithmetic English Subjects Phonics • g Citizenship Geography ' Texas History .§ U. S. History .S Beginners History _I Civics Nature Study _ Home Economics _ Music Physiology Drawing Hygiene Mechanical Draw. Shop Work Days Present Days Absent Times Tardy Deportment Indolent Wastes time Work carelessly done Gives up too easily Shows improvement Very commendable RECITATION Appears not to try Seldom does well Inattentive Capable of doing better Shows improvement Very satisfactory v - STANDING BY SIX WEEK'S PERIODS I I 2 1 3 1 Ave. I Exam. I Sem. Ave. Grade . Grade Ave. I 4 1 6 _ 6 Grade Exam. Sem. e I Grade Ave. I II 4+ o I ( ,4 a A a a A a 4 a A A÷ a - ai- A A A Q 4 A A A A A a- A • 30 20 'Po 0 0 o 1 0 f 0 ATTITUDE TOWARD W We; 4 A A- � H. 0 <1 4Q 0 o 00 4 - A 4 1 4 STUDENT ATTITUDES I I I I 1 2 I 3 4 \ Yearly Standink A 9 9 A a A A A -r /51 • i k /R 0 0 I I 6 • • g el L co 6th Period TO PARENTS OR GUARDIAN Kindly examine card carefully, sign and return promptly. Please notice each grade and confer with us if you desire informa- tion relative t( this report. SIGNATURE 1st Period 2nd Period 'Ye ' �`, 3rd Period 4th Period r )'\ (\r\ - - A' 5th Period lANA-h- • N ` A LEGEND A excellent, 90 -100; B good, 80 -90; C fair, 70 -80; D unsatisfactory, 60 -70; F failing, below 70. Promoted to G Grade Retained• --ta I / L Teacher C l as Supt. __;C A. & 1. (lhiutailthatrb 'rint1l lElrutrnfarl (!rabri Report to Parents Age q Parent or Guardian2_' The Home, the School and the State Should Work To3ether for the Good of the Child. REPORT OF OF Grade 19‘._fi _19 2 7 Teacher • • STANDING BY SIX WEEK'S PERIODS Avg. Exam. - Sem. I Avg. I Exam. I Sem. SUBJECTS 11 I •3 Grade I Grade I Avg. 4 1 5 1 6 Grade I Grade _I Avg. Arithmetic I I__A__ 4 i 1 IL— ^ _ A I A Pc 97 A Civics _ I I Citizenship I 1 I I Drawing A A A A. 9 A p English ,A A , A. A A ICI . A _Is___ Geography U i I�� A w t A + / 6.0-- ' History, . S. I History, Texas I I I A I History,Beginners I A 1 I A+ I A t A+ I iov I_E - - y J± a+ A± A} pr } 1 . Home Economics I I n Hygiene __ _I I I 7-s 1 9 (o Music _ I _ I — Nature Study Phonics I I I Physical Ed. I _ I lis Reading ! A I A A I A Shop Work __ I I Social Studies I �1 l I Spelling -- I A+ A At _ALL /e-o- _A A k A± 4 Writing I I I Days Present 36 A$ 13 D g 7 I Days Absent 6 6 1 Q 6 _0_1 0 Times Tardy 1 6 _0 it e o1 0 Deportment I AN A' I A A 1 A A ATTITUDE TOWK ADWORK I Indolent Wastes time Wnrk carelessly done Gives up too easily Shows improvement Very commendable RECITATION Appears not to try Pr in danger Inattentive Capable of doing better Shows improvement Very satisfactory STUDENT ATTITUDES 1 I 'L I 3 I A ICI A 4. A 97 Yearly Standing A- A A- A f A- 5 I 6 Class From 1 Students interview senior citizens to find their musical preferences and specific favorite songs. They record what they think about when they hear this music and what pictures or photographs express that indi- vidual's feelings. Then the student studies the song or composer to discover the layers of meaning in the lyrics and refrain. From this, and photographs supplied by the senior citizens, the students create a music video that they take back and play at the retirement or nurs- ing home. They show it to everyone and interview the audience for their feelings and reactions. "This helps students estab- lish a relationship with older people and they get a broader view of humanity and aging. They realize it is a natural part of life, and they get to know older people in a differ- ent way because they find the commonalities between them- selves and aging people," Maggio said. They discover that, even though the aging person can't ice skate or ride horseback now, it still is part of that per- son's life and is meaningful. At the Grand Court, a num- ber of women involved with students in this project have become interested in doing a chronicle of their lives through the music of their eras. "We'll help them make it into videotape so they can take it home to their families when they visit," Maggio said. Maggio recalls a student see- ing a picture of a very early women's basketball team. "The student was fascinated by the bloomers at midcalf, with the midi - blouses that looked so restricting. "The senior citizen replied that she was a pioneer in that outfit, and that tons of slips and skirts had been the previ- ous uniform." About 50 students partici- pate each spring semester. So far, 200 students have done special projects since 1994 at Blue Bonnet, Sherwood, Grand Court and Southwood nursing homes. There is talk of making an "image jukebox" for residents so they can hear and see their musical favorites. Compiling all the videos would have more than 200 ready to analyze. "Foreign students enjoy this class very much because they learn about lifestyles in the U.S. that they weren't here to experience. It opens their eyes to our American heritage." Maggio also tells about a nursing home resident who always had planned to go to Hawaii with her husband, but he passed away before they could travel together. "So, the student working with her took her photographs and superimposed them via the computer graphics on a Hawaiian background and printed them up for the resi- dent. "She was thrilled with the result, and very touched by the student being so receptive and open to her dream," Maggio said. If you would like to be part of this spring's class project, call Maggio at 845 -6781. The t u,of 9 r revviewt19e_r Aa-Af\ Co nsol dai Ele vvi e vita kv Cc in co - O A -OA e 0 1 s THe- A'^A campus "S k1 - IIN ,e ' c be SQe acK GjrO614A— Li 4 ca *I pa S k‘ 1 .. — • 1 3eTh i( ; Aa1e _ i 9 27 u' F ' 7 r°`j ..k w+o +14er se. NG/i/la1e_ t-4411.._ � � .._ F `' sck ll avk GeTt S o e Y' l c \ A t o One_ Y a r vi -W 5 ()oily rTatk t-ur -e. .o on +11-e_ F 13 f -d10 ✓1 . N\ar'1 t41 Mu%11erkyvk ( ), L l\ \ - - 4 01/41.e- ca ti L f))el'vi S o lkalt keepik1S La a 4- 14 e_ l4 ale' s house-. YoT Su03 'the_ rwelCi-1/ �I a41 '2j a r i u✓ Lt 1 N \Aa V\ °V "5 �t. e . i '- - • • �,. :. et.+4t7.r: ,am; . V coc o C -fie Frei rest {- t e F a S l a w ,n A'qs A 41 . @)42-- SL: 1-taie. _ ka\e- reS\Jpvrc -e___ `" C3 51ck1761 -, sr sue,. =. C ( J u - 11 gale � So male Engi neer," - roY4fio� }Ne �°� (� ;1� ��a1e- �'� hu� kAivi6 a roah1 i 93c/ c. • • J.F. Holick, 103, is Dead; First A &M Bandmaster Funeral services for Joseph F. Holick, 103, who conceived the famous Texas Ageie Band in 1893, will be at 9:45 a.m. Tuesday at the Hillier Chapel and at 10 a.m. at St. Joseph's Catholic Church. A Czechoslovakian cobbler who came to the United States in 1885, Holick died Sunday morning in a local nursing home. A rosary will be recited for Mr. Holick at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Hillier Chapel. The Rt. Rev. T. J. Valenta is scheduled to officiate and burial will be in the Mt. Calvary Cemetery. Hoick, the first A &M band- master, first farmed for two years in Kansas with his Banking is a pleasure at First Bank & Trust. brother. In 1891 they parted and he came to Texas. Holick took up his family trade, shoemaking, in Raymond Blatherwick's Main Street boot shop in Bryan. Lt. Ben Morris, Corps commander, asked Holick to make him a pair of shoes. Shortly after that, he became the college cobbler Morris learned that the wandering cobbler could play musical instruments and asked him to play the bugle. After playing Reveille and Taps for his $65 -a -month salary, he asked if he could form a college band. The administration headed by Lawrence Sullivan Ross, agreed in 1893. Holick and a student, Arthur N. Jenkins, rounded up 11 other musicians, some Texas Militia uniforms and instruments. The Texas A &M Band was born. When Jenkins left A &M, Holick became director of the band. Previously he had been director but had qiit to recuperate from influenza. Holick retired in the early 1900's but remained on campus doing shoe work fix cadets. In 1929 the shop was moved to North Gate. Holick was a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church and the SPJST Lodge. Survivors include four brothers, Joseph F. Holick Jr., E. A. Holick, Joannie Holick and Gilbert Holick, all of Bryan - College Station; one daughter, Mrs. Helen Huebner of S 'attle; 15 grandchildren and 27 great grandchildren. Pallbearers will be Ben Leon Wilson, Gilbert Holick Jr., Donald Holick Jr., William Kettler Jr., Robert Haltom and Charles Wagamon Jr. • ■ 2/z 27:T6 Flks We ' : Know .' IL J. DUNN • Director of the South's largest college band and counted one of the section's' greatest bandmasters, - ;iehard.:,..4 ..Dunn. of ' the Texas A •and: M, College military - band finds tune : .to ;directan; orchestra of Col - lege'Station•ehildren, known as the Little '• Symphony, which is to ap- pear- in concert' at' Guion' hall this evening. It .was' Mr. Dunn who organized ymphony last year Now he, despite his many other duties, devotes time, talent and ex- ; perience, gained in studies from New • York to Cuba and in other, parts '. of the world, free of charge to train the young musicians of his community. Mr. Dunn's musical career start- ed when, at the age of six, he be- gan the study of music on the pia - no. At nine he changed to the vio- lin, studying that instrument at the Frank T. Benjamin School of Music at Philadelphia for four years and later under Prof. James Brophy of "the city of brotherly love." His entrance into the army at the time of the Spanish- American war also marked his turn to band music. He entered the army as bug- ler, but soon was transferred to the band to play cymbals (not know- ing anything about band instru- I ments), and to perform as kitchen police. While in Cuba, in the army, he took up the study of clarinet un- der the assistant bandmaster, Carl Colombo, a Norwegian, and the study of harmony and instrumenta- tion under one Pio Garrido Ot- termin, a bandmaster of the Span- ish Army. who chose to remain in Cuba when the Ispanish army with- drew. Having served two years in Cuba and two in the Philippines, he was stationed in New York City. There he : std violoncello under Carl THE BRYAN EAGLE, TI • Reckwell, and harmony at 'the Grand Conservatory with Dr. Eber- hardt. The talented young musician was promoted to assistant bandmaster at 20, and was offered a position in the Marine Band at Washington. Hoping to receive 'a promotion to the rank of bandmaster in the ar- my, he refused the Marine Band offer. His hopes were justified, and at only 28 he was bandmasters In an examination of Army band; masters for a commission at Paris in 1918, 210 reported and but 1Q. passed. He passed. second. ?" Mr. Dunn, now on the retired list as First Lieutenant, U. S: my,. has had many experiences as • a . musician and as a student of music over the world. At one time he played first 'Cello with the Itt= dianapolis Peoples Symphony Or- chestra under Dr. Paulson. Having studied under several in New Ydrk and also 'having taken quite some 'extension work from different m1n- sical colleges, he was head of the music department in the Educa- tional and Vocational Schools of the U. S. Army at Camp Gordon, Ga. Coming to Texas A. & M. as bandmaster several years ago, he quickly won a place in the state and section. In addition to making the . Aggie , band one of the ' best and :largest.; in the South, he.'be - came a . member ; df : the-Texas ' Mu sic 'Ass tion::pnd help. id ..make;•the Texas-,Band ,Teachers Association, Inc ; of :. which'.' he 1S' secretary• and has 'been :fot_years, the 'progressive and influential dy it is - today: One of his greatest honors was his election . to . the Amercan Bandmaster's 'Association being one of the two members from the ` South for several years a one of thg four at the present- ti t'tte It was : as a judge in the Tri- State Musical Festival at Lubbock, where he heard children of Texas, New Mexico and Oklahoma play, that he received the inspiration that resulted in the Little Sym- phony orchestra at College Station. Little Symphony -- (Continued from Page 1) that this will be the beginning of better music for the public schools of Texas. Nearly 50 children will take part in the program this evening, as follows: Violin —Lois Beal, Wil- liam Bilsing, Mary Dobrovolny, Minnie Jane Fuller, Dexter : Gab - bard, Sam Rhea Gammon, • Doris Gorbet, George • Gorzycki, Anna Frances Hornak, Beatrice Ivy, Cynthia Lancaster, Mary Leland, Mildred Little, B. J. Lloyd, Zelia Bell Lloyd, . Elizabeth McNew, Robert Guy , Neeley,' ' Margaret Paine, Grace Schroeder, 'Marie Schroeder, Alice Silvey, James Sikes, Katherine Smith, Ruth Tan- hanhaue, Luelllo Thornton, Betty Ann Vezey, Earle Vezey, Marga- ret Ann Williams, Betty, Jane Winkler, Mary Beth Winkler, Ro - ert Paine, and James Yarnell. Cello— Charles Kent, Douglas 'Little Symphony T o Use. Centuries Old flistritthents -- The insiruucents -used will be. of almost as much interest as the i program itself when . Little Symphony Orchestra of the -.A and M. Consolidated school: pre-, sents its concert under the 'direc- tion of Richard J. Dunn, , conduc- tor, at Guion "hall this ,= evenin at 7 :15 o'clock. Y�`• Two pia will . be 'used,- of which is a new ,Kimball ,parlor grand just purchased for the school. Directly contrasted':to .'it 'will be several violins over two centuries old, brought from Italy, Spain, and Germany, and prob - ably, brought to Texas in oxcarts. The story of how Mr. Dunn re- assembled and `rebuilt some of these instruments after cleaning the cobwebs and•.wasp nests out two years ago would make an in- teresting story in itself. For months he kept ,a general repair shop in his little instrument room at Guion hall to put in condition the many instruments needed for the children. It was the interest and .deter - 'mination �.- the __patrons -and the children, and the untiring efforts of Mr. Dunn as both di "rector and repair man, that made the Little Symphony a reality which is at- tracting attention throughout: the state. Those who have helped hope (Continued on Page 2) = - 1.a.,C4.✓�., rl 4a.,,Leland, arc., Marjorie - Steele Chimes- Charles - Campbell.: j Clarinet -David Brooks • Cofer 'and': James Gabbard Cornet— Robert < Sammons. Flute— Nelwyn Martin. French 'heir John::. Sandstedt. . Trombone—Herring Brownlee. Bass . viol -Leroy Koenig. . . Piano —Sara Allen Cofer and Bertha Nell Koenig. The program will be as follows: Patriotic song, "America." Entre • from Arthur . Sullivan's operetta "Patten 'cc." - Descriptive, "The Swing," Gur- litt. Duet for two pianos, "The Turkish March," Beethoven, by Misses Bertha ' Nell Koenig and Sara Allen Cofer. lltt M.inuetto, "The Holiday," Gur- . Solo for flute, "The Happy Lark" and "Dell Dance," Miss Nelwyn Martin. Morceau, "A Simple Story," Concone. Address, Mr. Ben S. Peek, prin- cipal, South Junior . High School, Waco. . • Suite, "The Masked Ball," Schu- mann, (a) "Opening of the Ball,"! (b) "Butterfly Dance," (c) "The Clgse' of the, Ball • 6 1",he' Pint Symphony," Biabel- " The First : Symphony." Bia- belll, ' Part One, Allego Moderato; Part Two, Andantino; Part Three, Allegro. The National Anthem. Eagle want ens get results. , oy am , ol on :ed Ce or • I ■ • ■ • • • ■ • f Chong Webb, Debbie Suesoto Carolyn Haynes, Mrs. W. C. Banks, Rita Rhoton, Patty Gillmam ana Gwen Andric have been having summer fun as they learn to play the piano together. A totally different piano instruction is offered to Bryan - College Station area residents by Stuart Pianos and Organs.' The group method using electronic piano wired - to a central communications center is proving to be the most effective means for starting beginners, both children and adults, on the piano. An invitaton is extended to everyone to go by Stuart's at 3200 Texas Avenue to see their music laboratory and to obtain information on registering for new classes starting Sept. 6. There will be classes for all age groups beginning with age 7. • • ROBERT M. HUTCHINS Chairman Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions / The Fund for the Republic, Inc. Dear Friend: It would be intolerably presumptuous of me to imply that this country could have averted some of its current frustrations if more people had listened to what was being said at the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions. But an examination of the dialogues held at the Center in the past dozen years does indicate that the Center has served as an early warning system for dilemmas that plague you and me and all of America today. Let me give you a few examples. ... In 1962, long before ecology became a popular cause in our country, Aldous Huxley and others participating in Center discussions warned that we were paying a tragic price for our technological progress by blindly letting it upset the balance of nature. ... When every new technological advance was generally being hailed uncritically, Center dialogues pointed out the dangerous social implications of modern technology. Almost 10 years ago, the Center held discussions based on the proposition that politics should be primarily concerned with the quality of American life -- an idea that now finds its way into the rhetoric of many political leaders, including President Nixon. At a time when America's over - reliance on massive weapons systems went widely unchallenged, participants in Center dialogues warned of the fearful consequences that would result from this. The Center was one of the early critics of America's growing involvement in a small Asiatic country called Vietnam. This was one of the most controversial of the Center's warnings and a distinctly unpopular view at the time. 1 "Who are you ?" and "What exactly do you do ?" These are the questions people not familiar with the Center most frequently ask me. I tell them that we are lawyers and we are scientists. We are politicians and philosophers. We are social scientists, religious leaders, writers, teachers, businessmen, labor leaders, poets, preachers, conservatives, humanists, radicals. We are Arnold Toynbee, Reinhold Neibuhr, Justice William 0. Douglas, Pierre Mendes- France, Lord Ritchie - Calder, Senators J. William Fulbright and Wayne Morse, Ivan Illich, Walter Lippmann, Erich Fromm, J. Kenneth Galbraith, Paul G. Hoffman, Chief Justice Burger, James Farmer, Clark Kerr, U Thant, Norman Cousins, George Romney, Mayor John Lindsay, Marya Mannes, Stringfellow Barr. These are just a few of the world- renowned men and women who have taken part in the important Center activities, along with Center Fellows Harry S. Ashmore, Elisabeth Mann Borgese, John Cogley, Rexford Guy Tugwell, Harvey Wheeler and John Wilkinson. What we do is talk. Yes, talk. With changes taking place so rapidly around us these days, I think you will agree that it is crucial to give issues their proper perspective -- and that it is a matter of life and death that these issues be intelligently debated before they get out of hand. Which is precisely why we talk. We argue. And counter- argue. We consider all sides and examine every worthwhile view. But the Center cannot be dismissed as a debating society. From this talk come ideas. And from these ideas sometimes comes action. We stand on the proposition that constructive action requires prior consideration of what needs to be done and why -- with due regard to the possible consequences. • Michael Harrington, as a special consultant to the Center, undertook the research and observation that resulted in "The Other America," the book which attracted the attention of the late President Kennedy and led to the war on poverty. The Center took the lead in focusing attention on the impact of automation. Its publication "Cybernation: The Silent Conquest" stirred such discussion that the President appointed a special commission to examine the problem, now recognized as among the paramount challenges confronting our society. 1 * In 1965, the Center sponsored a convocation based on Pope John's encyclical "Pacem in Terris" which brought together leaders from 21 nations and indirectly led to the important address given by Pope Paul at the United Nations. * A second " Pacem in Terris" convocation in Geneva united nearly 400 leaders from 70 nations and resulted, among other things, in the first East Germany -West Germany discussions since World War II. * A Center study of religious institutions resulted in conferences and publications that have been hailed by the religious press as having a profound and lasting effect on the ecumenical movement. In the past few years, we at the Center have turned our attention to such issues as the biological revolution, the need for a new science policy, the revitalization of education, the peaceful development of the deep seas, and the revision of the United States Constitution. Any and all of these issues could explode into a crisis next year. Or in 1976. Or 1984. Now is the time to explore and understand them, before it is too late. That is the crucial job we attempt at the Center. The backbone of the Center's support is its members -- people like yourself, over 100,000 of them! They have joined the Center to help continue and expand its vital work, and to keep abreast of its activities through highly acclaimed Center publications. Because the list upon which we found your name indicates you probably share the interest of these people in understanding the basic issues our society now faces, we believe you are someone who will want to join them as a Center member. As a member, you automatically receive The Center Maga- zine, published bi- monthly, and The Center Report on alternate months. Though its contributors are scholars and experts, you will not find The Center Magazine an academic journal edited for a limited, erudite readership. What you will find are crisp, cogent articles. And since the articles spring from Center dialogues, you encounter in them arguments on basic issues presented in highly readable form so you may examine them and come to your own decisions. In The Center Report, you get enlightening, behind - the- scenes features about the personalities, the projects and the events that make up the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions. In its pages you find commentaries, speeches, previews, reviews, even a Center crostic to challenge your wits. As a member, you also receive announcements about the books and audio tape recordings produced by the Center, and you are entitled to a substantial discount on these. Book titles include "Pacem in Maribus," the important book that grew out of the Center's recent Malta convocation on the peaceful development of the deep seas ... "Vietnam -- Matters for the Agenda," a citizen's handbook for understanding the Vietnam peacetalks ... "Students and Society" ... "The Constitution Revisited" and many others. On the audio tape recordings you will find historic Center dialogues captured for posterity. Morris Ernst on censorship, Cesar Chavez on creative non - violence, Harry Ashmore on his conversations with Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi, Paul Ehrlich on population control, and hundreds of others. As a new member, you also receive "The Establishment and All That," an exceptional anthology of articles selected from The Center Magazine. Available at bookstores for $2.95, it is sent to you free when you become a Center Member. I am sure you can understand that because of its very nature, the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions must remain independent. We have never received any continu- ing support from government, industry or even the conventional foundations. We rely upon our members, men and women who, like yourself, are concerned about the mounting, pressing problems in our society. We look to those who still value ideas as a foundation for progress, who believe it is still possible to make sense out of life. Noted city planner William R. Ewald recently spoke of the Center's membership as "the critical nucleus of a new class emerging in America, a class whose wealth consists of knowledge." When you become a Center Member, you become a part of that nucleus, joining forces with housewives in small towns -- and Congressmen who use Center publications as material for their speeches -- and VISTA volunteers in Appalachia who read Center publications to keep their minds active -- teachers and professors who want their courses and students to go deeper than the textbooks -- librarians -- civic leaders -- businessmen -- doctors -- lawyers -- and yes, even Indian chiefs. Most importantly, of course, when you join you are lending your personal support to the fine work of the Center. I am enclosing along with this letter a Membership Form. This entitles you to enter a Center Association Membership at RMH /js Enos. I urge you to join us. $10 instead of the regular fee of $15. The fee has been reduced to introduce new members like yourself to the Center. You will, of course, receive full membership benefits, including The Center Magazine and The Center Report. If you are one of the many people concerned and anxious about the world that is being shaped around us today ... if you want to see sane reasoning conquer over thoughtless emotions .., if you want intelligence and foresight to guide our futures ... if you believe true democracy in action with independent, open exchange of ideas can change the world for the better ... Sincerely, Robert M. Hutchins Chairman a n erfor the Study of Democratic Institutions /The Fund for the Republic, Inc. • Box 4546 • Santa Barbara, California 93103 (L-e-ag)1/4>J' 74 ylAAfra dzu-x4A/ a - 7Le-o - KCL-e-, ,t„ 0-t 4-w/A atu ece- '&U Gt,a-v1/2, a , 4 4 7,0t,1 - " -Tkiz "Tfr"AA1 ,(jam -ef 1 (A^-4 -Lik-H 9 otta-mAr /49-Jd„l' p "1.eti ' re)C ec-t C.�`� b ` � t 1'N a--030 1 Y11 Y1. Or 11 41G-� '(rat g\ I lrt 6- a t i 5 +-o n a at- r , ( 9, 0 5.k.- c, \ L‘s u i }L c vu-t GL vt O trA, C� 7r t- o c3 `vL `YUtat, ri. 5 0 - 1 - 1A ; ca 02Jc,t .. n E co k c s Y�i tJOr5i +i ros yam ,r , c, d? 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Holick - 1st bandmaster at A &M College of Texas as he appeared in US Army Uniform 1893 at A &M Our View The Eagle Opinions expressed below are those of the Editorial Board. Members of the board are: Fred Lister Publisher Rod Armstrong Finance director Robert C. Borden Opinions editor Bernard Hunt Editor Margaret Ann Zipp Columnist Help is sought to preserve the past Eagle Editorial Board 0 ne of the things — the many, many good things — that sets Texas A &M University apart from other schools is its incredi- ble sense of tradition. Aggies know the future can be built only with a knowledge and apprecia- tion for the past. Yet, like many schools — indeed like many other institutions, both government and private — in its rush to greatness, A &M hasn't always been as careful as possible in preserving its rich past. Now, a group of 35 students at A &M want to change that. The Old Main Society takes its name from A &M's first building, which was destroyed in a 1912 fire. Society members hope to keep some other campus landmarks from disappearing forever. The group is trying to block the demolition of Law and Puryear halls, campus dormitories built nearly 70 years ago and spared, at least temporarily, by A &M regents in January. The two dorms suffer from major structur- al problems and need extensive renovation. Photos courtesy of Texas A &M University Archives Texas A &M's Old Main, top photo, was the first building on campus. It burned in 1912, bottom photo. A group trying to save old buildings on the A &M campus is calling itself the Old Main Society. The question arises whether the buildings are worth what it will cost to repair them. Does their his- torical value warrant the cost or could that money be better spent on something else? If repaired, how much longer could the old dorms continue to be of service? These questions are not easy to answer. Not every old building can be preserved. The historical or architectural value of some buildings is minimal. Members of the Old Main Society need to remember this when they go about their preservation efforts. The society is going about its task the right way, though. Rather than just calling to preserve a building, society members are coming up with realistic plans to do just that. Members also want to save DeWare Field House that is slated to be razed when the new student recreation center is opened in the fall. The society wants to convert DeWare into a sports gallery hon- oring A &M's magnificent accom- plishments. Not every proposal by the Old Main Society may be possible, but it is encouraging to see young peo- ple so eager to preserve their his- tory. A &M would be wise to give serious consideration to their ideas. • • o Goodbye Law and Puryear $4 qG Eagle photo /Michelle Lyons Demolition began Saturday morning on two Texas A &M University residence halls, Law and Puryear. Demolition of the 68- year -old dormitories was approved last October after the Texas A &M University System Board of Regents found that renovation was not economically feasible. The A &M Residence Hall Association approved a plan to construct a memorial made from the bricks of the two dorms, and the current plan is to preserve the vacant space as green space. i o The Singing Cadets T he "Voice of Aggieland" Singing Cadets will perform in concert in Navasota, voic- ing their enthusiasm and love for Texas A &M University through their music. The concert will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Brosig Avenue Auditorium in Navasota. Admission is free, but donations will be accepted. The concert is sponsored by the Navasota Music Study Club, Navasota commerce, industry churches and individu- als. A variety of songs, popular music, hit tunes, spirituals, patri- otic selections, novelty numbers and school songs will be per- formed. Texas A &M has had an all-male chorus since 1894. This group, originally known as the Texas A &M Glee Club, was renamed the Singing Cadets in 1940. Today, Corps participation is no longer a requirement for Singing Cadet membership. Since Texas A &M was originally an all-male, mili- tary institution, all members belonged to the Corps. Richard Jenkins became the first full-time director in 1942. The Singing Cadets are now under the direction of David Kip, who is the 13th director of the 70- member group. The group includes members from across Texas and the United States. No member of the Singing Cadets is a music major, as Texas A &M does- n't offer such a degree. Some are also members of the Corps of Cadets. Condy Carter is the only woman who appears on stage with the Singing Cadets. She has A &M's Singing Cadets bring song to Navasota Details Event: A &M Singing Cadets Presenter: Navasota Music Study Club. Date & Time: Tuesday, 7 p.m. Place: Brosig Avenue Auditorium, 100 Brosig Avenue, Navasota. Tickets: Free, (Donations accepted.) played piano for the group for the past nine years. A musician for more than 25 years, Carter has served as pianist for many church congregations and public school choirs. During the past five years, the Singing Cadets have traveled more than 30,000 miles, performed more than 350 concerts and visited more than 100 Texas cities. The group has performed for nine state and national conventions and at the Texas Choral Director's Convention. The Singing Cadets performed before former President George Bush at the 1989 Texas A &M Commencement and at the CARE World Leadership Banquet in 1995 honoring Bush. The Singing Cadets have toured Romania, Mexico, Europe and Hawaii. They will go on their northeast tour in May, which includes performances at Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center. They have produced four compact discs and 16 albums and cassettes. For more information or to reserve tickets for the concert, call Judy Glaser at 825 -0477 or Carol Gessner at 825 -6878. 0 JA 44 O Ni story IOHN LeBAS e Staff Writer Region Sunday, September 21, 1997 Former students remember their days in the Fightin' Texas Aggie Band with a ceremony honoring former band director Col. Joe T. Haney, for whom the band's drill field is named. For Sterling, the reunion was a chance to reconnect with his beloved Aggie Band, to which he fully credits his lifelong career in music. "If it hadn't been for the Aggie Band, I'd be playing for bootleggers," he said. Sterling was in the first Bugle Rank of the Aggie Band under Col. J. Harold Dunn. But his love for music was so great that he left A &M to tour with a New York -based jazz band only two weeks before he was sched- uled to graduate. He said he traveled "coast - to -coast and to Honolulu" for about two years before he came back to finish his degree. He became known as "Jimmy Valen- tine," and still plays in the Houston area with his Sterling Silver Band. Sterling, whose son is a former Aggie Band member and whose grandson is a cur- rent member, always returns to A &M for band reunions and attends as many A &M football games as possible. "Anywhere that band plays, I'm going to be there — one way or the other," he said. "Now that I've got a grandson in the band, that's guaranteed." This bond between young and old, cur- rent and former band members is a con- stant and unifying force in the band. For example, the head drum major of the reunion band, Steve Sullivan, is the father of current drum major Chris Sullivan, said A9 Eagle photo /John LeBas Jim Sterling plays his horn Saturday at the Aggie Band reunion. Sterling now plays in a Houston -area band. Mary Jo Powell, associated director of uni- versity relations. Sophomore drummer Peter Norris of Company B said current band members Please see BAND, Page A16 Aggie Band honors past 3y :agl It didn't take Jim Sterling very long to igure out that he belonged in the Fightin' ,exas Aggie Band. Sterling knew how to play trumpet, but vas a football player by trade when he ,nrolled at Texas A &M College in 1934. He )riefly attended Marshall Junior College In a football scholarship before coming to &1VI, where he tried to play for the Aggies. But he said a couple of tough practices vith a now - legendary teammate changed its mind. "I didn't last long," he said Saturday. 'After Joe Routt (an All- American offen- dve guard later killed in World War II) aced me a time or two, I decided music was no - e my game." Sterling, 81, was one of about 250 former )and members in town this weekend for the tnnual Aggie Band reunion. The reunion )egan Friday with a barbecue dinner at the 3razos Center and wrapped up last night C.E. 'Pat' Olsen celebrates b 94th with friends Babe Ruth's former roommate still enjoys talking about baseball By Greg Huchingson Editor & Publisher A group of dignitaries including "Old Goats ", Texas A &M Univer- sity officials and other friends turned out Monday afternoon to wish C.E. "Pat" Olsen a happy 94th birthday. "He just loves being around peo- ple and talking about baseball," said Anne Popham, who hosted the event at the Bryan home of she and her husband, Bobby. Olsen, who played collegiate baseball at Texas A &M from 1921- 23 and professional baseball for the New York Yankees, was once roommates with legendary slugger, Babe Ruth. Olsen is a long -time benefactor of his alma mater — and specifically its baseball program. The A &M baseball stadium, considered one of the best in the nation, is named after Olsen. Among the friends who attended Olsen's birthday bash were mem- bers of the "Old Goats," who are almost all over the age of 80 and still hold regular meetings. A &M dignitaries at the event in- cluded president Dr. Ray Bowen, vice - president Robert Walker, ath- letic director Wally Groff, head baseball coach Mark Johnson and assistant baseball coach Bill Hickey. Others in attendance in- cluded Helen Pugh, Harry Green, Happy 94th Aggie legend C.E. `Pat' Olsen receives birthday congratulations from his former employee of 43 years, Lee Dittmar. Olsen, a former member of the New York Yankees and one -time roommate of Babe Ruth, recently turned 94. Linda Johnson, C.D. Long, Jim Beard, Fred Brown, Kristen Davis, Meredith Patranella, Emma Daven- port, Jimmy & Lee Dittmore and Vic & Mary Shepperd. Former Texas A &M baseball coach Tom Chandler helped orga- nize Le event, but was unable to attend due to a function associated with his job as a scout for the Detroit Tigers Baseball Club. Popham said Olsen still enjoys watching baseball games on televi- sion and listening to them on the radio, and reads the sports section of newspapers every day. "He complains about the salaries of ball players today," Popham said. photo by Mark SCal