Weather Today Generally fair through Sat urday. Turning a little warmer Saturday, with a minimum to night of 40. THE BATTALION 12th Man Bowl Tonight Published Daily on the Texas A&M College Campus Number 83: Volume 58 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1959 Price Five Cents Bills Shooting To Halt Secrets In Government AUSTIN (AP) —The third in a series of legislative measures fighting secrecy in government was sent to a House subcommittee for further study early yesterday. The action was taken by the House State Affairs Committee in a hearing that did not begin until midnight and lasted until about 12:45 a.m. The bill (HB79) by Rep. Truett Latimer of Abilene would require open meetings of all public agen cies. Several members of the House committee indicated agree ment on principles but suggested amendments. Members of the subcommittee are Reps. R. L. Strickland of San Antonio, Max Smith of San Mar cos, and Menton Murray of Har lingen. Two Senate committees sent two other anti-sec*recy measures to subcommittees Wednesday. The companion bill on open meetings (SB66) was sent to a Senate State Affairs subcom mittee that will be named later. A bill (SB97) tightening prose cution of public officials charged with wilful destruction or remov al of public records went to a Sen ate Jurisprudence Subcommittee consisting of Sens. George Park- house of Dallas, Drosey Harde man of San Angelo, and Charles Herring of Austin. Bike Hits Student In Heavy Traffic Patrick L. Sullivan, B Infantry junior from Comanche, received treatment for a deep 3-inch gash on back of his head yesterday morning after being hit by a bi cycle. Sullivan was hit by the bike as he and his roommate were cros sing the street in front of the Basic Division on their way to class shortly before B a.m. Identity of the student riding the bicycle could not be learned. An ambulance took Sullivan to College Hospital where he was given treatment, Dr. C. R. Lyons, director of Student Health Serv ices, said Sullivan lost quite a bit of blood but was expected to be released from the hopsital today. The accident occurred in al most the , same place a 4-year- old boy was struck by an automo bile Feb. 7. The area is heavily congested by traffic daily at 8 a.m., 12 noon and 5 p.m. Law Hall Chooses Dorm Sweetheart Miss Mary Jo Saunders of Gainesville has been chosen sweet heart of Law Hall by the Law Hall Dorm Council at a meeting recently in the Puryear Lounge. Miss Saunders, a junior majo rette in the Gainesville High School band, will represent Law Hall during Civilian Weekend. The 34-23-35 sweetheart was chosen from her picture submitted by Ralph Bullard, junior animal husbandry major from Gaines ville. Bullard will be her escort. Miss Saunders will be at Sbisa Hall on Saturday night, March 21. She will receive a gift as recogni tion for representing Law Hall, said Lee Griggs, dormitory mas ter. Because of the deadline March 13, other civilian dorms and hous ing units are urged to chose their sweethearts. Entries should b e turned into the Office of Student Affairs, YMCA. Army, Air Force Vie In Grid Battle Tonite STECJHER AND HOROWITZ . . . duo pianist team at Town Hall Tuesday Town Hall Bringing Chorale Tuesday The Roger Wagner Chorale, con sidered by many critics as the fin est singing group in America to day, will bring their voices to G. Rollie White Coliseum Tuesday night at 8 to entertain Aggies at Town Hall. Co-starred on the concert will be the duo pianist team, Stecher and Horowitz, who have been praised by experts for their “mu sicianship, choice of repertoire, impeccable teamwork and trans cendent technique.” Other critics have said, “Stecher and Horowitz make piano magic “rank with the best on the concert stage today.” Lead by its dynamic French- born director, Roger Wagner, the chorus is embarking upon its third cross-country tour. The chorus plans to appear in 50 cities from coast to coast. Wagner, born in LePuy, France, some 40 years ago, was exposed to music at an early age when his father was organist at the Cathed ral at Dijon. When Wagner was only seven years old, the family came to the United States and set tled in Los Angeles. At the age of 12, Wagner was organist and choral director at the ClTurch of St. Ambrose. By the time he was 14, he often substi tuted for his father as organist at St. Brendan’s Church, in addition to being the boy soprano of St. Brendan’s famed choir. When his voice changed to baritone, Wagner decided to return to Fx-ance, where he spent five years studying oi’gan with Marcel Dupx-e in Paris, com pleting his undergraduate work in music at the College of Montmo rency and delving deeper into re search on church music at Dijon and Lyon. Upon his return to Los Angeles in 1937, Wagner’s fii'st job was as a member of Metro-Goldwyn-May- er’s choi’us and shoi'tly thereafter he was engaged as musical direc tor of St. Joseph’s Church in down town Los Angeles, a post he has held ever since. This was the be ginning of a series of events that led directly to the first profes sional concert of the new interna tionally acclaimed Roger Wagner Chorale some 11 years ago. The chorus made its first public appearance duxung the 1945-46 sea son as the Los Angeles Concert Chorale, a unit sponsoi’ed by the Los Angeles Bureau of Music. Its present name was adopted in 1947. Ranging in number from 16 voices to 255 depending upon the music to be interpreted the chorale reflects the “energy, musicianship and impeccable taste of its direc tor.” Town Hall season tickets will be honored at the door. Single ad- mision tickets are $2 for adults and $1 for high school and elementary school children. A&M Director To Address Ag Majors Monday Sterling C. Evans, newly ap pointed member of the A&M Board of Directors, will be the xxxain speaker at the Agricultural Convocation at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom. Evans is a former student, Class of ’21. After receiving a degree in agriculture, he went to work for the Agricultural Extension Serv ice, starting as a 4-H Club agent and eventually becoming director of the county agent program in the Lubbock area of the South Plains. In 1934, Evans became president of the First Houston Bank for Co-operatives. He remained at his job until 1490, when he be came president of the Federal Land Bank in Houston. He re cently resigned this position when he found he could not devote enough time to his various ranch and plantation properties in Texas and Louisiana. “I was a week-end farmer,” Evans comxxxented. “It was a hob by, but now the hobby has become too big to be left for weekends.” During the program, held each year by the Student Agricultural. Council, the departmental clxxb with the highest percentage of its members present will be award ed a gavel made in 1957 from wood taken from Gathright Hall. All agricultural students and the agricultxxral teaching staff have been invited to attend the prograxxx. STERLING C. EVANS . . . ag convocation speaker Fly hoys Favored In 12th Man Bowl By FRED MEURER Battalion Managing Editor Kyle Field once again takes on the splendor of a foot ball battlefield tonight at 8 when Air Force and Army grid- ders clash in the annual Student Senate-sponsored 12th Man Bowl. Nothing short of blood and tears might be shed as the Army Maroons run headlong into the Air Force Whites in a game which will decide unofficial rule of the campus for an other year. It’s hard to find a rivalry more bitter than one between the two service branches and this one is no exception. If anyone is playing favorites in the contest, the odds are lean ing towards the heavier Flyboys. Installment Fees Due by March 20 The spring semester third in stallment fee, $61.40, is now pay able in the Fiscal Office. Deadline for payment i s March 20. The $61.40 covex’s Board, $43.55, room, $14.20, and laundxy, $3.65, until April 23. Comedienne, UT Juggler To Perform at Talent Show Musical comedy with a feminine touch and a juggling, Middle Eas tern style, are the specialties of Pat Long and Zahi Faranish, two acts scheduled for staging in the eighth aixnual Intercollegiate Tal ent Show March 13 at 6:30 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. These two acts are among 10 selected for the show from the Me- Physical Society To Meet Saturday Prof. James G. Potter, head of the Depax-tment of Physics, and several faculty members and stu dents will attend a meeting of the American Physical Society in Aus tin Saturday. The meeting is one of seven which are held yearly to pi’ovide an opportunity for persons in advanced physics to compare theo ries and technical data. ZAHI FARANISH . . . juggler morial Student Center Music Com mittee’s search for top college tal ent in Louisiana, Mississippi, Ax - - kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. Other features of the production will be the Kilgore College Ranger- ettes and Joel A. Spivak, disc jock ey-emcee from Radio Station KILT in Houston. Miss Long, a freshman music major at Millsaps College in Jack- son, Miss., moves from piano ren ditions to a song and dance routine in her act, according to ITS dii'ec- tor Johnny Johnson. Second-place winner in the Mid- South Talent Show in Memphis, Tenn., the young Mississippian was often a winner of local talent shows in her home town, Tupelo. This year she sang the lead role in the Millsaps production of “Paint Your Wagon” and was a winner in the state piano contest. In addition to her musical activi ties, Miss Long is a member of Kappa Delta sorority of the college Wesley group. A petroleum engineering student at the University of Texas, Fara nish has been juggling in public presentations since he was seven year old. Originally from Naza- rth, Israel, he has won first place in numerous talent shows, both in Nazareth and at UT. He is a mem ber of the UT Newman Club. Tickets for ITS are on sale at the MSC main desk and through dorm representatives. Advance sale general admission tickets will sell for 75 cents. General admis sion at the door will be $1, re served seats are $1.25 aixd chil dren’s tickets are 50 cents. PAT LONG ... musical comedienne Series of Sessions President Plunges Into Berlin Crisis WASHINGTON (A*)—President Eisenhower yesterday took extra ordinary steps to cope with the Berlin crisis. First he reviewed the , situation at a 1%-hour special session of the National Security Council. Then he asked Democratic and Repub lican leaders of Congress to meet with him at the White House this morning. The White House news secretary, James C. Hagex’ty, was asked if anything had developed in the last 24 hours to warrant calling Fri day’s meeting an emergency ses- sioxx. “No, I wouldn’t say that,” he x'eplied. Hagerty said the meeting was called simply' for a discussion of the Berlin situation and German px'oblems genex’ally. That was the same topic discussed at yesterday’s extraordinary session of the Na tional Security Council. Shortly before the meeting as sembled, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev said in Leipzig, East Germany, that the May 27 dead line on Berlin may be postponed a month or two if fi’uitful East- West negotiations are under way by then. Seci'etary of Defense Neil Mc- Elroy, who attended the Secux’ity Couixcil meetiixg, told newsmen later that “we are doing a great deal of planning.” Without going into any details, he said the Joint Chiefs of Staff are working on various contingencies. In reply to questions, McElroy discounted the possibility of any lixxiited war developing out of the Beilin situation. “It would be very difficult to keep it a limited war,” he said, meaning that if open conflict should break out it would be likely to xmxshroom. McElroy and Acting Secretary of State Christian A. Herter were asked to return to the White House Friday for the Pxesident’s 10:30 a.xxx. EST session with Congres sional leaders. Those iixvited in clude: Vice President Richard M. Nix on, Sexxate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, Speaker of the House Sam Ray burn of Texas, Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illi nois, and House Republicaix Leader Charles A. Halleck of Indiana. New Test Designed For Entering ‘Fish’ Freshmen entering A&M next fall will take a new test to help predict their futux-e academic pexYormance, according to F. E. McFarland, director of testing and research for the Basic Divi sion. The old exaxxx will be replaced by a new and better sexnes of tests, said McFarland. The new test series has been chosen to replace the old exam because it will be more reliable to score and easier to administer to a large group, McFaxdand said. The new series will enable a com parison of answers of the various editions, an advantage which the old exam did not have, he added. News of the World By The Associated Press U. S. Officer Killed in Algeria ALGIERS—An American Air Force reserve officer and his young German interpreter were slain from ambush Wed nesday night in an Algerian rebel area while making movies. The American was Homer Flint Kellems, 65, of Siloam Springs, Ark., a brother of the fiery Connecticut woman in dustrialist-tax rebel Vivien Kellems. ★ ★ ★ Iran, Turkey, Pakistan Sign Pacts ANKARA, Turkey—Iran, Turkey and Pakistan, scorning Soviet threats and denunciations, yesterday signed separate defense pacts with the. United States. The pacts provide that the United States “will take such appropriate action, including the use of armed forces, as may be mutually agreed upon” in event of aggression against the three powers. The Kremlin has warned all three nations that by sign ing defense agreements with the United States they lay their territory open to attack in event of war. The Soviet pressure on Iran has been severe. ★ ★ ★ Surprise Attack Impossible WASHINGTON—Secretary of Defense Neil H. McElroy said yesterday it would be virtually impossible for the Soviet Union to make a Pearl Harbor-type surprise attack on the United States with bombers or missiles.. Typical of many gridiron matches, tonight’s game will feature light speedsters try ing to run around heavy bruisers. The Air Force has 10 of its 33 men tipping the scales at 200 pounds or better while the Army posts only three of its 32 men in that bracket. Heavy contact scrimmages have been raging in both camps this week under the watchful eyes of the student coaches and their staffs. A&M Guard Allen Goehxing is head mentor for the Air Force while Center Stan Roper is guid ing the Army. Assisting Goehx’- ing are Rodger McFarland, Carl Luna, Luther Hall aixd Dick Gay. Roper’s aides are Tonmiy Flood and Ray Doucet. The Air Force, still smarting fx’om a basketball defeat at the hands of the Army last, year in the 12th Man Contest, will be aiming a revenge bomb at the Army’s ar tillery. Two years ago, however, the Flyboys outdid the Ground- Pounders on the gridiron to set the stage. In military terms, tonight’s stra tegy could be revex'sed. The heavy Air Force may depend on a ground attack while the lighter Army is perhaps destined for the air. Nei ther coach has named a starting lineup. At any rate, the show unveils tonight at 8. Tickets selling at 50 cents will be on sale at the gate. As an added attraction, the Wharton Junior College Stars will perform at halftime. Complete rosters are: ARMY Backs—Joe Flood, Sonny Todd, Perry Pope, Gene Beyer, Jerry Morgan, Johnny Winder, Donald Hoffman, Calvin Bx’ummett, Cole Williams, Foy Roydex-, Red Knight and Jimmy Chapman. Centers—Bobby Botard, Chester Collingsworth and Corky Cobern. Guard s—H e r b i e Campbell, George Dunn, Robert Richey, Jim my Garrett, H. D. Vincent and Leonard Baker. Tackles—Bob Coffey, Johnnie Cooper, Ray Whitmire, Gary Hipps, Ronnie Steger and John Eagle. Ends—Paul Rushing, Tom Aus tin, Thomas Bailey, Barney Seely and Grady Barr. AIR FORCE Backs—Bob Dunn, Bill Moore, Fred Billings, Vernon Yanta, Geox-ge Stansell, Don Moskal, Don Cantrell, Larry White, Bob Singer, James Spikes, Cliff Hamby and Merle Lock. Centers—Harold Hildebrand, W. Lee Murray and Dick Goff. Guards—Ronney Burnett, Clar ence Pennywell, Bud Gentle, Bob Barr, Lynn Laird and Marvin Aar- dal. Tackles—Ben Williams, Paul Bax'sotti, Dick Steadman, John (Bannwox-th, Lawrence Milner and Neil Selby. Ends — Bob Simms, Leonard Clark, Lynn Scott, Mike Medley, Lynn Woolley and John Beakley. Guide Posts Genius finds its own x’oad, and carxies its own lamp—Robert A. Willmott