illgs ek Musters Planned Around The World ?h 27-28, in i’ames. utout SMIUlj ime in Dallas j I • ! 11*1 lllllirjji lar Center" ers for (-Peugeot & Jot or Cars rts—Service 11 Foreign Call ). TA m INT Schnitzel, ian Style Che Battalion Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1963 Number 98 12th Man Bowl’ May Not Be Held Football Gear Undergoing Repairs diday, in oil srsigned will be openfoi ompany ciation Association By DAN LOUIS JR. Battalion News Editor Cknees are that there won’t ic a 12th Man Bowl this spring. Doug Hotchkiss, Student Senate es committee chairman, report- d Thursday night that the com- littee had “run into difficulties fith the athletic department and don’t see how we are going to be ble to hold the game this year.” Hotchkiss told the committee iat he had been trying to talk «Coach Hank Foldberg since the irst part of March, but after allure to “get together with him” arried his business to Barlow Bones) Irvin, assistant athletic lector, and S. M. Meeks, equip ment manager, last week. HR TOLD the Senate that Irvin md Meeks told him that it would # impossible to have the bowl [ame because equipment had been leaned and stored or was being repaired. He said that Irvin point ed out that Kyle Field would not be ificates) cards and . Drawing Supply of ft Certifi- store. available because a sprinkler sys tem was being- installed in the playing area. Foldberg told The Battalion Thursday night; “I’ve been out of town quiet a bit lately and Mr. Hotchkiss and I couldn’t seem to get together on the thing, so I asked Irvin and Meeks to handle it for me.” “I ASKED the boys last year to try to come to me about the game early this year. I haven’t had a chance to talk to Bones and Meeks since I’ve gotten back, hut if there is a conflict I feel like it has come up because our equipment has been cleaned and is undergoing repairs,” he added. “I’ll be more than glad to talk to the boys and see if we can work something out, but I’ll have to talk to Bones and Meeks before I can say anything definite,” he con cluded. Irvin stated that he felt that the thing was brought to him too Election Speeches To Begin Monday By GLENN DROMGOOLE Battalion Staff Writer Campaign speeches for Wednes day's student government election will be held Monday at 7:30 p.m. i» the Lecture Room in the Chem istry Building. A1 Wheeler, chairman of the elec tion commission, announced at the Student Senate meeting Thursday %ht that the speeches will he leld in accordance with the student Senate’s demands for more colorful tampaigns. He said a five-minute limit would be placed on presidential and nee presidential nominees, with all other candidates being allowed three minutes for their speeches. IN OTHER SENATE business Ken Stanton, chairman of the stu dent welfare committee, stated that more than 300 students have signed ap to donate blood next Wednesday. “It looks like the blood drive is going to be a real success this year,” Stanton said. Stanton added that about 30 per cent of the students are usually re jected for various reasons by the Wadley Research Institute, which conducts the blood drive each year. Bast year 212 students donated to the blood bank, he said. REGISTRATION FOR the dona tions was to continue through Fri- ^ Board Discussion On Coeds Possible In Spite Of Agenda susg (WPS & IMPS fit pnrcbiw of Office and the Gift Shop in the Memorial Student Center. Donors will be given cards de scribing their blood types and factors, and will be allowed to use the blood hank in the event of in jury or disease to them or their immediate families. Stanton issued a challenge to the Senate to join with service fraternity Alpha Phi Omega in pledging 100 per cent participation. In other business Jerry Vion, chairman of student issues com mittee, read a letter written by a member of the senior class on assignment in a journalism class. THE LETTER, published by the Bryan Daily Eagle, severely criti cized conditions existing in the college dining halls. “I don’t think that half of these statements can be proven,” Vion claimed. “Some of these complaints could very well be true. However, I have never been told of any of these things personally.” Included in the letter were ac counts of “barbecued mouse” and a “bug” dripping with salad dress ing. “I renew my invitation to any one who wants to come to my room (Dorm 10, Room 215) or come with me to Duncan Mess Hall on Thurs day mornings and air their gripes,” day at the desk between the Post Vion added. late. He said crews were in proc ess of installing a sprinkler system when the committee approached him and that work was going to have to be done to the turf in preparation for next fall. “WE TRIED to get the boys last year to schedule this year’s game earlier,” he commented. Meeks said, “This thing always hits us at a bad time, but we have always worked something out with the boys. However, they just came to us too late this year. “I’ve already got the pads cleaned and sent off for repairs. Also, I’m in the middle of my in ventory in preparation to requisi tion equipment for next year,” he added. He added, “We told the kids last year that they ought to have the game in December. However, if Coach Foldberg wants me to pull what equipment I’ve got here out and issue it, I will.” Ball Staffers Hurt In Ohio Auto Accident Two members of The Battalion staff were slightly injured early Wednesday night in a station wagon-truck collision near Spring- field, Ohio. An A&M professor and another student also suffered minor injuries. Ronald L. Fann, Battalion news editor from Houston, and Juan Tijerina, Battalion photographer from Laredo, were enroute to New York City for a convention of Alpha Delta Sigma, national ad vertising fraternity, when the col lege vehicle driven by Depai’tment of Journalism head Delbert Mc Guire collided with a heavy truck at the top of a highway incline. TIJERINA REMAINED in a Springfield hospital overnight for treatment of a broken nose. Fann was treated for a lacerated arm. McGuire received a knee injury, and Charles Mauldin, also with the group, received minor head injuries. The truck driver was uninjured. Both the station wagon and the truck were heavily damaged. THE GROUP was to return to College Station Thursday after noon, college sources said. They left here Tuesday night and planned to arrive in New York sometime Thursday, driving straight through. They were to meet Ted Jablonski, another ADS member, in New York, who re mained at his home there after the Easter holidays. The possibility of a decision on coeducation by the A&M System Board of Directors was still uncertain late Thursday as system officials readied the official agenda for next Satur day’s regular board meeting here. The agenda should be released sometime Friday, but chances seem to be slim that a dis- oussion of coeducation will be specified in the lengthy docu ment. Several system officials, plus members of the board, said the issue would probably not be listed on the agenda. Only a definite request for discus sion by a board member could place the matter on the agenda. Board President Sterling C. Evans, however, has been quot ed by a Houston newspaper as saying, “Since the matter has received so much publicity, we will discuss it.” An issue’s absence from the official agenda does not mean that a discussion and possible decision will not be made. Just at the last meeting, in January, the board voted to ask for a college name-change even though the matter was not listed on the agenda for con sideration. Both afternoon Houston news papers, the Chronicle and the Press, ran stories late last week on reports that a coeducation decision might be forthcoming. The Battalion first told of these reports in its March 21 edition. Heavier than usual news cov erage of next Saturday’s meet ing seems assured, System In formation Director Normand DuBeau said Thursday after noon. Only a handful of re porters is usually present at board meetings, but DuBeau said several other newsmen had notified him that they will attend. The gist of most reports and rumors concerning possible board action is that girls may be admitted to the graduate school next September, and then to the undergraduate school on a day-student basis not long afterward. Board members, however, have denied that informal dis cussion has reached this ad vanced stage. Most directors say the matter has been dis cussed informally, but that plans to take a vote on the issue have not been made. Should the directors come to a decision on the coeducation question, their decision would be final. Unlike the name- change proposal, legislative ap proval would not be required. PETERSON Blood Donors Step Up Another prospective donor for the upcoming blood drive registers with Alpha Phi Omega offices in the MSC. The registration will continue through Friday after 370 stu dents had already signed up by 5 p. m. Thursday. Charles King (left) and John Parker are seated in the picture help ing sign up Jerry Strandtman. Tonight, Saturday Are Final Events Of Pan Am Week The eighth annual Pan American Week, a program designed to pro mote the spirit of Pan American ism among A&M students and local citizens, is well underway but stu dents still have tonight and Satur day in which to get into the swing of things. Highlighting the activities to night will be a Latin American Smorgasbord in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. The menu will feature exotic foods from several Latin American countnes with serving to begin at 6 p.m. TICKETS FOR the smorgasbord are $2.25 per person. The ducats will not be sold at the door and must be purchased in advance. Following the culinary tour of the Western Hemisphere, Val T. Billups, retired oil man and world traveler, will present his second picture tour of the Latin American countries. The series of slides will include views made during Billups’ 27-day trip up the Amazon River. Events Saturday will begin with the Southwestern Intercollegiate Soccer Tournament to be held be ginning at 1:30 p.m. on the soccer field east of Kyle Field. Teams participating in the competition are St. Mary’s University, Uni- Candidate Filing Will End Today Friday is the deadline for fil ing by candidates for the gen eral election slated for Wednes day... Voting will be for student government positions and civil ian yell leader. Wayne Smith, election com mission advisor, said Thursday that 28 persons had filed for the positions. “I w , ant to mention once more that those students who filed during the first filing period must file again,” he ad ded. versity of Houston, Sam Houston State Teachers College and A&M. A BARBECUE WILL honor the players and their guests following the tournament and a trophy will be presented to the winning team by the A&M Corps of Cadets. Making the trophy presentation will be Charles Blaschke, senior class president. Satui*day evening a 30-minute fireworks display will be presented in Kyle Field. The colorful action is scheduled to begin at 7:45. Concluding the Pan American Week activities will be “Cafe Tropical,” a dance in the lower level of the MSC. Miss Rosita Fernandez, star of Walt Disney's production of “Sancho, The Homing Steer,” will be the featured singer at the dance. The band of Eduardo L. Martinez will provide music. The dance is slated to begin at 9:00 p.m. and tickets are $2 a couple. Local Ceremony To Most Peterson As Main Speaker By KENT JOHNSON Battalion Staff Writer Plans are being made to observe this year’s traditional Aggie Muster in a main ceremony Sunday on the A&M campus and 200 other ceremonies throughout the world. The ceremony which first began 60 years ago is held April 21 each year on the anniversary of the Battle of San Jacinto to honor Aggies who have died during the past year. The first Muster was held in 1903 after, the 396-man A&M student body which in cluded Fish Pinky L. Downs marched to the president’s home and demanded that some ceremony be held to observe the Battle of I San Jacinto. It was in this battle in 1836 that Sam| Houston’s army staged a surprise attack on Santa Anna’s Mexican army and won in-| dependence for the Republic of Texas. Since that time, April 21 has always been a day of mustering for A&M men. The symbolism behind the Aggie Muster is the loyalty of Aggies to each other and to A&M. The campus Muster will be held at 2 p. m. Sunday in front of the Memorial Student Center,, and will have L. F. Peterson, Class of ’36 and president of the Former Students Association as the main speaker. The Aggie band will open the ceremony with the state song, “Texas Our Texas,” and following will be an invocation given by Reggie Richardson, Student Senate chaplain. Corps Commander Reviews Tradition The muster tradition wull be presented by Bill Nix, Colonel of the Corps. The next part of the ceremony will be a band quintet playing “Will You Come To The Bower,” the Battle of San Jacinto rallying song. Sheldon Best, student body president, will introduce Jack A. Crichton, vice president of the Former Students Association. Crichton will give a welcoming address on be half of the association. After his speech, the Singing Cadets will sing “The Twelfth Man.” President Rudder will introduce Peterson for the main speech which will be followed by “The Spirit of Aggieland.’’ Head Yell Leader Bill Brashears will read the roll call, and friends of the deceased Aggies will answer. The Ross Volunteers will fire a 21-gun salute, and “Auld Lang Syne” will be sung. Several radio stations in Texas are scheduled to broad cast live portions of the main ceremony from College Station Sunday. Other stations will broadcast tapes of the obser vance Sunday evening and Monday. Aggies Off Campus Can Take Pick All Aggies who will not be on campus to attend the main observance may attend others scheduled by some 200 Aggie Ex groups throughout the world. Aggies who will be in Dallas Sunday may observe Muster at 3 p. m. in Embry Hall at the First Baptist Church. The church is located at the corner of Ervay and San Jacinto, two blocks north of the Republic National Bank Building. Dallas Muster chairman Bill Beatty, Class of ’50, said Ben Templeton, also Class of ’50, will be the Muster speaker. Paul H. Rosamond, Class of ’43, who helped make arrange ments for the Dallas observance said that special organ arrangements of traditional Aggie songs will be presented. The ceremony will be conducted by Tom Sample, Class of ’45. Refreshments will be served after the ceremony by the Dallas A&M Mothers Club. Houston Exes To Gather Monday The Houston A&M Club will sponsor a Muster observance Monday, April 22, at 12:30 p. m. in the Rice Hotel Crystal Ball Room in conjunction with the club’s regular weekly luncheon. Raymond Loomis, Class of ’42, club vice president and Houston Muster chairman, said a luncheon beginning at noon will precede the observance. Tickets for the luncheon will cost $2.05. He said everyone is invited to attend both affairs, but luncheon tickets need not be purchased by those desiring to attend only the Muster. Peterson will also be the principal speaker for the Hous ton Muster. Dallas radio station WFAA, Fort Worth radio station WBAP and Bryan radio Station WTAW will broadcast the main ceremony to be held on the A&M campus from 2 to 2:45 p. m. Sunday. Houston FM radio station KFMK wull re-broadcast the Houston A&M Club Muster at 7 p. m. Monday. Texas will be the site of over 140 Musters, 35 will be held in other states and 18 are scheduled in foreign countries. Committee Passes Name Bill; May Go To Floor Next Week A&M’s name-change bill sailed through the House’s State Af fairs Committee Thursday after noon and may come to the floor early next week. Rep. David Haines’ proposal, calling for a change to Texas A&M University, came through both the committee and a sub committee without a change. There was some opposition ex pressed when the committee vot ed to approve the measure. Ac cording to J. Collier Adams of Lubbock, there were three nega tive votes voiced on the commit tee’s roll call vote. Bryan’s tele vision station KBTX, however, quoted committee chairman John Allen of Longview as saying “the vote was pretty close.” The Associated Press said four mem bers voted against the change. Adams, chairman of the sub committee that first studied the bill, told The Battalion Thurs day morning that the measure had not been reported out of his subcommittee. Actually, how ever, the subcommittee cleared the proposal Wednesday after noon. Rep. Haines also told The Battalion Wednesday night that the subcommittee had taken no action on the bill. Haines could not be reached by The Battalion Thursday night, but Adams said the bill would probably come to the House floor next week, possibly as early as Monday. KBTX quoted Haines as saying he had no indication when he would bring the bill to the floor. The freshman legisla tor predicted the bill would pass, even though some representa tives still favor the name Texas State University. Adams predicted a “humorous episode” when Haines does intro duce his bill. He quipped: “It should be pretty interest ing on the floor. Quite a few members have voiced personal objections to our committee and I’m sure they will bring them to the floor. Also Haines will probably receive a lot of rib bing.”