At Austin Meeting Ag Secretary Lauds A&M Special to The Battalion AUSTIN—The best background for a young man want ing to enter the cattle business is practical experience and a good education at A&M, according to Secretary of Agricul ture Ezra Taft Benson. Secretary Benson expressed-* ;— these opinions at a Tuesday morn ing press conference in Austin, in coordination with the 83rd annual Foreign Grads May Apply For Assembly Approximately .50 openings are available for visiting students dur ing the International Assembly to be held in Williamsburg, Va., June 10-14, according to Robert 0. Mel- cher, foreign student adviser, whose ofifce is in Room 27, Mil ner Hall. The two major eligibility re quirements for attending the as sembly are: The student must be a citizen of a country other than the United States and must intend to return home at the conclusion of the present academic year; the student must have completed at least one year of graduate-level study by the end of the present academic year. Selection will be made on the basis of the applicant’s personal qualifications, campus record, and reasons for wanting to attend the International Assembly. Full con sideration will be given to appli cants from all geographic regions and Horn small as well as large educational institutions. The central theme of the four- day conference will be, “The Amer ican Image: Shadow or Sub stance?” with discussions being led by 10 authorities in politics, history, economics, communication, and the arts. Emphasis at all times will be on the relaxed inter change of ideas and opinions. The purpose of the theme, a pro vocative topic, is to encourage a frank and personal analysis of the significant phases of the American experience of each participant. Informal presentations, question- and-answer sessions, and general discussion periods along with tours of the historic area provide the framework for the conference. All foreign students interested in applying for the Assembly can get application blanks in Melcher’s office in 27 Milner. Deadline for applications is March 31, and ap plicants will be notified before April 30. Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Assn, convention. He congratulated the cattlemen of Texas for their “freedom and independence in the face of severe economic difficulties in the past . . . ” He spoke quite strongly in both his address to the convention and in the early morning press conference against a planned and subsidized economy. “The trend of young ranchers and farmers is the same as their seniors . . . toward less price sup port and for more freedom,” Ben son said. He lauded 4-H and Future Farm ers of America projects as good stepping stones for youth headed toward a career in Agriculture. They can get financing for projects under these programs. “Financing is a problem to the young aspiring rancher, because of increased mechanization and size of ranches,” he said. • Benson cited one formula for entering the cattle business which (See Ag Secretary Page 3) The Battalion Volume 59 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1960 Number 88 Possibility of Closing Guion Hall Presently Under Consideration In Southwest Region Wallace Nominated For YMCA Post David Wallace, junior history major from Pecos, has been nominated for the position of co-chairman of the South west Region of the YMCA, according to Bill Shenkir, presi dent of the A&M YMCA. Shenkir said the Southwest Re-"* gional Assembly, which includes Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas, will be-held at Camp Carter near Ft. Worth, Friday, Saturday and Free-Lance Writer Due Here Friday Free-lance writer W. C. Heinz will speak Friday at a convocation of all students in the Department of Journalism. Heinz, a resident of Stamford, Conn., will arrive on cam pus Friday morning. Following his arrival, he will tour the campus, after which he will speak to a group of 18 selected journal ism students in a 3 p.m. coffee in the Journalism Library. His topic for the 7:30 p.m. con vocation speach in the. Assembly Room of the Memorial Student Center will be “Writing for Na tional Magazines.” He will then remain on campus through Satur day to cover the inauguration of Deadline Today For Election Filing Today at 5 is the deadline for filing for a place on the ballot in the coming class elections. Students wishing to file for class office in the classes of ’61, ’62 and ’63 must make applica tion by 5 p.m. today at the Cash ier’s Window in the ground level of the Memorial Student Center. President Earl Rudder’. Since 1950 he has been a free lance writer. His fiction and ar ticles have appeared in The Satur day Evening Post, Cosmopolitan, Collier’s Esquire, Life, Look, True, The Reader’s Digest, Coronet, Ar gosy and Sport. His work has been reprinted in more than two dozen anthologies and he has won the E. P. Dutton Award for best magazine sports article of the year five times. In 1948 his first novel, “The Profes sional,” was published by Harper & Brothers. Red Smith, the syndicated sports columnist of the New York Herald Tribune, called this work “a clas sic in its field,” and of it Ernest Hemingway wrote, “The Profes sional” is the only good novel I’ve ever read about a fighter and an excellent first novel in its own right”. Sunday, at which time the co- chairmen of the YMCA-YWCA for the region will be elected. Wallace has served as regional co-chairman for the past year, and will be attending the World Stu dent Federation Teaching Confer ence in Strasburg, Austria, this summer, said Shenkir. The theme of the meeting will be “The Mission of the YMCA On the Campus and In the World,” and Mrs. Margaret Norton, nation al executive of the Student YMCA will be the platform speaker for the Assembly, said Shenkir. He said the students from A&M attending the conference will be in charge of worship services for the weekend, conducting one Fri day evening, Saturday morning and evening and Sunday morning. Students from A&M planning to attend the assembly include Wal lace, Don Willis, Dick W. Simpson, Jimmy Wolfe, Steven Moore, Dan iel Brown, Paul N. Smith, Ronald G. Haley, Malcolm D. Maxwell, William T. Barnhart and Shenkir. BULLETIN Faculty members will line up on two sidewalks west of G. Rol- lie White Coliseum for the in auguration procession which will move at 10:15 Saturday morn ing, according to J. J. Woolket, head of the Department of Mod ern Language and head of the Inauguration Committee. Under CS ‘Pay-As-You-Go 'Plan City Completes Three Streets By BOB SLOAN Assistant News Editor Since the College Station “pay- as-you-go” plan for street im provement and pavement was adopted by the city council Oct. 29, 1958, three streets have been paved, two streets are being worked on now and plans are be ing made to begin work on five more this summer, according to Ran Boswell, College Station City Manager. Boswell explained that there are two possible types of streets that can be constructed, depending on the desires of the property owners along the street and the recom mendations of the city engineer. The first type is what is called the curb and gutter section. This street costs the property owner $3 for each linear foot of property on the street. Any extra cost will be paid by the city. ‘Six-Inch Base’ “The base for this kind of street is six inches thick with one inch of asphalt on the surface,” Bos well said. “The curb and gutter street may be required on some streets to provide adequate drain age or to provide ample traffic lanes,” he added. The other type, a ditch and pavement section, costs property owners 75 cents a linear foot, Bos well said. Ditches May Be Added “For this type street, the exist ing base coarse may be sacrificed, additional base materials added and the street shaped and com pacted. Side ditches may be added when necessary. “The city then surfaces the street section with a one-inch hot- mix asphalt surface 20 to 24 feet wide, the exact width to be de termined by the City Council,” Boswell added. Three Streets Finished Boswell said three streets have already been completed under the plan. Lee Street, in the Oakwood addition, west of A&M Consoli dated High School, was the first street to be completed. Lee Street was paved with the curb and gutter section at a cost to residents of $3 per front foot. “There was 100 per cent par ticipation by property owners on the Lee Street project, eliminating the necessity of having to assess residents,” Boswell added. “If all the property owners on a street agree to the improvements and complete all financial arrange ments at the time the petition is approved by the City Council, there will be no need to pass a special assessment ordinance, which would require a public hearing,” Boswell explained. “This would eliminate some time in getting the work starter.” The other two streets which have been completed to date are Park Place from Timber to Glade, a curb and gutter section and Glade Street from Park Place to Anna, a ditch and pavement proj ect which cost residents 75 cents per front foot. Owners Participated 100 Per Cent Property owners participated 100 per cent on both of these projects, which are also located in Oakwood, Boswell said. Work has begun on a curb and gutter project for Kyle and Wal ton Streets in College Hills Es- Vanity Fair Entry Deadline Less Than 4 Weeks Away Monday, April 25 is the dead line for seniors to enter pictures for the Vanity Fair section of The Aggieland ’60. The pictures, which must be 5x7 or larger, must be turned in to the Office of Student Publi cations in the basement of the YMCA Building, according to an announcement by Sam Barranco, Vanity Fair editor. Each picture submitted must also include the candidate’s name, age, weight, height, hair and eye color and measurements. The winning entry must be able to attend the Student Pub lications Award Banquet Friday, May 13, the Senior Ring Dance and have a portrait made at the Aggieland Studio. tales, east of the college. Work on this project has proceeded more slowly due to delays in the form of a public hearing before prop erty owner’s could be assessed and bad weather, Boswell said. Work is expected to get under way on two curb and gutter sec tion streets sometime this sum mer, said Boswell. They are a section of Thomas Street in south east College Park and Moss Street from Highway 6 to Foster. and then Foster from Gilchrist to Kyle in College Hills. Plans are also being made to construct ditch and pavement sec tions on five streets this summer, according to Boswell. They are the entire length of Cooner Street, Cross Street from Tauber to Nagle in the Tauber development, Stas- ney Street from F.M. GO to Cherry Street and Cherry Street from Tauber to Nagle, also in the Tau ber development. Boswell said the procedure per sons desiring their street paved should follow is simple. A peti tion should first be obtained from City Hall. The petition should be signed by owners of at least 70 per cent of the front feet of prop erty abutting on the street section to be paved and then submitted to the city manager. The City Council will establish the order of priority for street construction, determine the length of the street section and the type of construction based on recom mendations by the city manager and the city engineer, Boswell said. Files for Office Buddy Bradford, junior science major from San Antonio, registers for a place on the coming class elections. Deadline for filing for election is today at 5 p. m. at the Cashier’s Window on the ground level of the Memorial Student Cen ter. Bradford filed for a spot in the Class of ’61 elections. Ueckert Named As Aggie CofC Head The Student Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors met last night and elected a president, vice president and ap pointed committee chairmen for the remainder of the current year. Bruce W. Ueckert, second year - *" veterinary medicine major from Houston was chosen president and Eugene Stubbs, junior business ad ministration major from Wortham was named vice president. The officers will serve for the remainder of the year, and will be candidates for office next year. In following years, however, office holders will not be eligible for nomination to chamber offices the following year. Committee Heads The council has set up four per manent committees to serve in var ious areas continuously. C. R. Jul ian, junior chemical engineering major from Crockett was chosen to head the Visitors Program and Information Committee. Byrum W. Collins, junior business admin istration major from Satin will head the Local Relations Commit tee. Clifford Lane, senior indus trial education student from Col lege Station will head the Profes sor Relations Committee. Philip H. Harrison, junior business ad ministration major from Lufkin and treasurer of the group will serve as membership and funds committee chairman. From Student Volunteers At the general organization meeting held last week, membei’s were asked to sign up for the com mittees they would be interested in working with. These names were Employes Plan Costume Dance A costume dance will be held Thursday, March 24 at 8:30 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the Me morial Student Center, Stan Clark, chairman of the College Employes’ Dinner Club has announced. “This will be a refreshment dance—no dinner,” Clark says. “If you are not a season ticket holder get your tickets at the main desk of the MSG before 2 p.m., tomor row.” placed on the committees of their choice,, and other nanxes will be added as new members indicate a desire to serve, according to Ueckert. The Board also recomxnended changes to the constitution of the group which will be voted on in the next general meeting. Attendance Fall Cited as Reason By LEWIS REDDELL Battalion Staff Writer The possibility of closing Guion Hall, A&M’s movie theatre, is now under consideration, J. Wayne Stark, direc tor of the Memorial Student Center said yesterday. “Costs of operating the movie have become prohibitive, compared to the number of students who utilize this facility, Stark explained. Student Service He pointed out Guion Hall was never intended to be a money mdking institution, but rather a service to students. Stark cited several reasons for the decline of attendance at Guion, including an increased interest in television, more activities available for students and a much greater percent age of Aggies now have auto-^“ mobile transportation avail able. No definite steps have been taken to close the theatre, however, he said. “In the event Guion Hall was closed, the MSG Film Society would probably increase the num ber of films it shows,” Stax’k said. These films would not be shown daily though, he explained. Built in 1917 and put into use in 1911, Guion Hall was originally used only for meetings, speeches and plays. Not until 1941 was it converted into a theatre for stu dents. Previous to World War II, pic tures were shown on Wednesday and Saturday nights in the old Asseixxbly Hall. This was located on the site now occupied by the Interfaith Chapel. In 1941, all of the equipment and facilities were moved into Guion and started op eration daily under the dii'ection of Tom Puddy who held that capa city for 18 years until last fall when illness forced him to take a leave of absence. Puddy is presently convalescing at Will Rogers Memorial Hospital at Saxanac Lake, N. Y., and faces several more months of hospital ization. Many important speeches and presexxtations have taken place in Guion; One noteworthy of men tion was the presentation of an Honorary Doctor of Law degree to President Eisenhower in April, 1946. • Kiwanians Plan Inter-Club Visit To Huntsville The College Station Kiwanis Club met at noon Tuesday and dis cussed plans for an intex’-club visit to Huntsville Monday of next week. W. A. (Cubby) Manning, presi dent of the club, presided at the luncheon meeting held in the As sembly Room of the Memorial Stu dent Center. Club member Bob Shiller an nounced the inter-club visit to the Huntsville Lions Club next week. Four members indicated that they would make the trip Tuesday. President Manning urged mexxi- bers to step up ticket sales for the club’s coxxxing Pancake Supper. The annual supper will be held April 2 at the National Guard Ar mory at East 25th and Burleson streets in Bryan. The supper will last from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. Club secretary W. F. Adams re minded his • fellow Kiwanians to pay club dues by the first of Apx’il. Following the luncheon, Tony Sorenson and Murray Brown led the group in singing several Ki wanis Club songs. Two quartets were featured in the program. HS V t -w* pig |1|! MJmM* mKm m New Apartments Near Completion The $2,500,000 F. W. Hensel Apartments, clean-up around the apartments. The 25- located behind the College View Apart- apartment development is expected to be ments, are nearing completion as shown by ready for occupancy next fall, this picture showing workmen beginning