The Battalion Volume 59 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1959 Number 32 In Music Room Bond Vote Set For Tuesday List of Needed Civilian Students for Bonfire Work By ROBBIE GODWIN Battalion News Editor The history of the A&M Consoli dated School District has been one of progress since its founding in 1939. This Tuesday the voters again go to the polls to vote for a $350,000 bond issue which is de signed to build more facilities and to repair and renovate existing fa cilities. The polls will be located in the Music Room of A&M Consolidated junior high school building. They will open at 8 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. Absentee ballots may be cast in the County Clerk’s office until Saturday noon. Only qualified voters in the A&M Consolidated School District may vote, according to the Texas Con stitution. A qualified voter is de fined as one who owns property rendered by the tax assessor-col lector, and who has lived in the school district for six months. According to J. K. Jackson, school board president, the ballot makes three propositions. Propo sition 1 states for or against “Maintenance tax.” Proposition 2 provides for or against “The issu ance of bonds and levying of the tax in payment thereof.” Propo sition 3 states for or against “The assumption of indebtedness and the levying of a tax in payment there of.” Proposition 1 has in its back ground Senate Bill 116, said Jack- son. This bill provides that a max imum tax of $1.50 may be assessed by the school board if the bonded indebtedness of the school district is no more than seven per cent of the tax valuation. If the indebt edness is no more than eight per cent, the school board may assess a maximum maintenance tax of $1.40. This is the category that Consolidated falls into. However’, the school board is on ly setting up $1.35 of this amount. The present tax rate setup calls for a maintenance tax of $1.16 and payment on bonds of $ .34 per $100 valuation of property. This is a total tax of $1.50 per $100 valua tion. Under the new program, the maintenance tax would be $1.35 and the payment on bonds out standing $ .55 per $100 valuation, totaling $1.90 per $100 valuation. Proposition 2 is the actual vote for the bond itself. Voting for this proposition would be voting for the $350,000 bond and the $ .55 tax per $100 valuation for payment on bonds outstanding. Proposition 3 spreads the present indebtedness over the whole school district. This measure was nec essary since the last bond election, the district has expanded, bringing in 12 more people. In order for them to legally share the tax, the proposition is necessary. Voting against either of the first two propositions kills the bond is sue, according to board members. The board set up a chart showing the estimated cost to a typical homeowner. It showed that on a $12,500 residence, the assessed val ue at the presept valuation rate of 45 per cent would be $5,500. The tax for this typical situation would be $104.50 per year. Under the present program, it is $82.50, showing an annual increase of $22.50. Filings Op en For Offices On Senate Filing for freshman positions on the Student Senate, election commission and class offices be gan last Wednesday at 8 a.m. at the cashier’s cage in the Memori al Student Center. Other positions also being filed for are junior agricultural repre sentative to the Student Senate and a sophomore recording secre-. tary. Qualifications for these posts are: the junior must be majoring in the school of Agriculture and have no less than 60 hours and no more than 94 hours of college credits. He must have a grade point ratio of 1.25. The sophomore must have at least 30 hours and no more than 50 hours of college credits. He must have a grade point ratio of 1.60. The entire student body will vote on the Student Senate and election commission posts with the exception of the junior agri cultural representative position. Only junior agricultural majors will vote on this position. Also, only freshman class members will vote for their class officers. Rules governing election and campaigning pi’ocedures may be found in the College Regulations Book. United Fund Drive Set In College View College View residents will be called upon tonight between 7:30 and 9 by members of the Apart ment Council to collect funds for the College Station United Fund drive. Guide Posts “I tell you that as long as I can conceive something better than myself I cannot be easy unless I am striving to bring it into exist ence or clearing the way for it.— G. B. Shaw l 5 ' * fci ! Ife: |#l fwlil . Silt Ils ■ \ . By Jim Earle Sarffe, Slouch See Victory Over Owls . . . kick-off at 2 p. m. in Houston Review Set Saturday Morning Rice Game, Corps Parade Highlight Football Weekend By BOB SAILE Battalion Staff Writer Highway 6 runs both ways, as the old saying goes, but for most Ags this weekend it runs south to Houston, the center of Corps Trip activities. Aggies will begin leaving the campus for “Big H” after their last classes Friday in order to arrive in time to set up weekend headquarters. The A&M-Rice football game at 2 p.m. Saturday and a Corps parade down Main Street at 9:30 a.m. will highlight events tomor row. The Corps Trip parade will start at 9:30 Saturday morning at Clay and Main Streets in downtown Houston and will move north on Main to Texas Street. Marching units will turn right at Texas and continue to Fannin Street where they will again turn right. They will then advance down Fannin to Clay, the original forming place, and will be dismissed. Commanders and guidon bear ers will assemble at 8:30 a.m. in the four-block area contained by the intersections of Clay and Bell streets with Main Street. Other outfit members will form at 9 a.m. and units will begin moving out at 9:30. Order of march for the parade is as follows: The Band, 1st Wing, 2nd Wing’ 1st Brigade and 2nd Brigade. The official reviewing stand will be located in front of the Rice Ho tel at Main and Rusk streets. Among those present on the re viewing stand will be Chancellor M. T. Harrington, President Earl Rudder, Col. Joe E. Davis, com mandant Lt. Col. Frank S. Vaden, Jr, assistant commandant, and of ficials from Rice Institute. Corps headquarters for the week end will be located in the Rice Hotel. Gametime for the A&M-Rice game in Rice Stadium is 2 p. m. Saturday. The Aggie student sec tion will be located in the lower east stands. Teacher Tests Planned in ’60 Special to The Battalion PRINCETON, N. J.—The Na tional Teacher Examinations, pre pared and administered annually by Educational Testing Service, ' will be given at 160 testing cen ters throughout, the United States on Saturday, February 13, 1960. Yell Leader Tells CivilianCouncil By DAVE STOKER Battalion Managing Editor “A list of all civilian students who are going to work on the bonfire is needed by Tuesday morning of next week,” Civilian Yell Leader Ken Cox told members of the Civilian Student Council last night. Cox said that the list is needed in order for the mess hall to know how much more food to prepare. Officials at the mess hall have already figured pn feeding the Corps, but do not know how many civilians will be working on the bonfire. Cox also said that work preference would be included by the student’s name on the list which is to be made out in the dormitories and then given to Cox by Tuesday morning. The Campus Chest was an-+" other major topic discussed by the councilmen. Roland Dommert, vice'president, told the councilmen that collection dates for civilians have been set at Monday and Tuesday following the Thanksgiving holidays. He pointed out that the dormitory presidents would be in charge of the collecting. Help Presidents “I want to urge you to work with the dorm presidents and help them in anyway you can in col lecting this money,” Dommert said. Annual Thanksgiving projects were brought up at the meeting by President Charles Graham. He told the members how dormitories had helped needy families in the past and hoped that every dormi tory would participate in such a program this Thanksgiving. Dommert complained of the lack of announcements on the civilian side in Sbisa Dining Hall. Robert O. Murray Jr., civilian counselor, told the members that he would call Col. Vaden and get the matter straightened out. Standing Committees Standing committees were dis cussed also. Graham told the mem bers of the importance of the Civil ian Weekend Committee and also pointed out that everyone would get a chance to. work on a com mittee.' The standing committees are the Executive Committee, the Tradi tions and Public Information Com mittee, the Civilian Weekend Com mittee, the New Student Week Committee and the Outstanding Council Award Committee. Present at the meeting for the first time was Wilton P. Thompson, representative from Hart, who is replacing Robert G. Watkins who recently resigned. Aggies Eligible For Applieation To SCONA Under a new plan adopted this year, students may apply to rep resent A&M at the fifth Student Conference on National Affairs •as official delegates of A&M. The 15 selected conferees from A&M will be assigned to round tables along with representatives from 70 colleges in the United States, Canada and Mexico. They will hear talks by nationally-rec ognized authorities on world prob lems and will attnd all SCONA social events. To qualify as a conferee, a stu dent must be classified as a junior or above, have a grade point ratio of 1.25 or better, have qualities of leadership and make a good appearance. No student on proba tion will be eligible. Application forms, available un til 5 p.m. Thursday may be pro cured at the Commandant’s Of fice, the Housing Office (Depart ment of Student Affairs) or at the Memorial Student Center (Post Office-Fountain room cor ridor). Applicants will be screened by interviews • with a committee of faculty, former student members of the MSC Council and SCONA faculty advisers. Interviews will be set up between 5 and 7 p.m. Thursday through Saturday. Ap pointments for interviews will be arranged when application forms are submitted to the Director’s Of fice at the MSC. Bureaus Blamed For Berry Mess For Nuclear Science Training Luedecke Commends Schools Texas educational institutions got a pat on the back Thursday night from the general manager of the Atomic Enrgy Commission for their role in nuclear education. General A. R. Leudecke, ’32, A- EC’s general manager, told an audience of nuclear scientists at the second Texas Conference on Utilization of Atomic Energy that the state of Texas was rising to the challenege of providing Better training in nuclear science engi neering, medicine and use of radio isotopes. “To our knowledge,” Gen. Lue decke declared, “seven institutions of higher learning in Texas are active in atomic energy education. A&M has a sub-critical assembly, a teaching reactor, and is building a research reactor.” Gen. Luedecke declared that one of the greatest current needs, na tion-wide, is for recognition of the importance of more training of scientists for the atomic age in which we have entered. Educa tional institutions, he said, have a “basic responsibility for seeing that nuclear energy is presented to students in perspective along side the other basic energy sources. To do this, of course, requires that textbook authors and class room instructors be aware of the important fundamentals as well as the newest applications of this fast-moving field of technology.” The AEG, Gen. Leudecke de clared, is furnishing educational institutions with substantial dollar help in improving nuclear science offerings through its programs of assistantships and grants for the purchase of scientific equipment. But, he added, “I do not mean to imply that we are doing the whole job. I am sure they can do it and will do it.’ His address to approximately 150 of the Southwest’s top nuclear scientists climaxed the first day of a two-day conference on atomic utilization problems held in the Memorial Student Center. The conference opened yesterday morning with discussions of high ly technical nature, including ad dresses on the studies of the chemistry of fission products in molten salt power reactor sys tems, determination of trace ele ment, and possibilities for storage of radioactive waste materials in abandoned gas reservoirs. W. T. Mullins, of the National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, described activation analysis tech niques by which material ariiounts of as little as one one-millionth of one one-millionth of one gram can be successfully identified through the use of analyzers. Such information, he pointed out, has practical applications in the manu facture of such items as transis tors, where control characteristics are dependent upon the amounts of impurities. Work at the college is being done for use by the AEG, using both the A&M System’s Data Processing Center’s high speed computers in conjunction with the analyzer ap paratus. R. E. Wainerdi, A&M Engineer ing Experiment Station, character ized the Nuclear Science Center, which is to become operable in 19- 61, as one of the largest in the South, and one capable of extreme flexibility of use. “With this center,” Wainerdi de clared, “We will be able to pro vide scientists of the South with tremendous help in the solving of vast numbers of problems relating to nuclear energy.” Possibilities for stoi-age of radio active wastes in suitable abandon ed gas reservoirs were discussed by George Crawford, of the Uni versity of Texas. Other subjects on the first day’s agenda include afternoon discus sions of problems of developing mor thei’monuclear power, develop ment of reactors for driving man ned aircraft and missiles, and problems in the design for the A&M System’s regional Nuclear Science Center, which will be one of the largest on any college cam pus in the nation when it goes into operation in 1961. At the one-day session a candi date may take the common exam inations, which include tests in professional information, general culture, English expression and non verbal reasoning; and one or two of twelve optional examina tions designed to demonsti’ate mastery of subject matter to be taught. The college which a can didate is attendin, or the school system in which he is seeking employment, will advise him whe ther he should take the National Teacher Examinations and which of the optional examinations to select. A bulletin of Information, in which an application is inserted, describing registration proce dures may be obtained from college officials, school superin tendents or directly from the Na tional Teacher Examinations. Educational Testing Service, 20 Nassau St, Princeton, N. J 1 . Com pleted applications, accompanied by proper examination fees, will be accepted by the ETS office during November and December, and early in January so long as they are received before January 15, 1960. By GEOFFREY GOULD WASHINGTON CP)—Two Re publican congressmen from cran berry-growing states blame “a stu pid bureaucrat” and “bureaucracy at its worst” for the present cran berry mess. Secretary of Welfare Arthur S. Flemming’s announcement Monday that the government was confiscat ing two shipments of contaminated West Coast berries has virtually halted sale of cranberries at the peak of the Thanksgiving market season. Rep. Joseph W. Martin (R-Mass) said at Pawtucket, R. I., Thursday: “The cranberry mess is a good il lustration of what happens when a stupid bureaucrat wanders into a field about which his knowledge is limited.” And Rep. Thomas M. Pelly (R- Wash) said at Seattle he would demand “a thorough investigation of the cranberry mess” when Con gress convenes in January. “This appears to be a classic example of bureaucracy at its worst.” Sen. Richard L. Neuberger (D- Ore) had no harsh words but joined others who have said the goveimment has a responsibility to protect innocent cranberry growers from financial damage due to the scare. Neuberger proposed that the government buy up the un tainted pai’ts of the 1959 crop. The cranberry scare started when Flemming announced that traces of a weed killing compound had been found in two shipments of cranberries grown in Washing ton and Oregon. Laboratory tests of the weed killer, he said, indi cated that it could cause cancer of the thyroid in rats. It was as sumed, but not proved, it might affect humans. He said there was no indication of trouble with cranberries grown in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Wisconsin, which produce much more than the Western states. But Flemming did not say how to tell the difference between East ern and Western berries. He said housewives who couldn’t be sure should avoid buying any. Flemming stood his ground Thursday at another news confer ence. He said he learned of the danger only last Saturday and add- ei - , “It is that kind of information that I believe we have no right to sit on.” And he said he would stand by his word that he would eat no cranberries until the whole situa tion is straightened out. He hoped that could be done by Thanksgiv ing, but said he could not be sure.