The Battalion Volume 59 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1960 Number 71 MHmHOKSHn s, f Ti dA 1 U.'.W mm Wm ■ 1 r^Ks, llilllf 8 , s f mm ii Y-. 'Y..- 1 h C'.-i 'ti m^ 4 WsSmm 14 J t 4 wm ffM) S§W' : i; 4 ^ ■ Founder and Students J. D. Sartwelle Jr. of Houston, left, and Bob by Quisenberry of Quanah, right, both freshmen students in agricultural economics at A&M, listen to tales of the school’s past from E. J. Kyle, the man who founded the agricultural economics and rural sociology department in 1919. Forty-one years have passed since this relatively new phase of agricultural training was added at the col lege, making A&M a pioneer in this field with the fourth largest department in the nation. Kyle established the department to meet the growing importance of the busi ness side of farming and ranching. The veteran educatior, now nearing 84, served as A&M dean of agriculture from 1911 to 1944. Sartwell’s father is president of Port City Stockyards in Houston. Bobby is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Quisenberry of Quanah and is winner of an Anderson Clayton Co. four-year scholarship. George Washington Day Aggie Fish Drill Team Takes Third at Laredo Annual Meet The A&M “Fish” Drill Team re turned to the v campus Sunday night from "Laredo after capturing third place in the annual George Wash ington Birthday Celebration. The team left Friday afternoon for the 300-mile trip to the South Texas town. While in Laredo, they stayed at Laredo Air Force Base, according to Capt. G. S. Coffin, assistant professor in the Depart ment of Air Science and the group’s sponsor. Saturday morning the Freshmen marched with other drill teams and bands from all over Texas and Mexico in a street parade which wound through Laredo, ending at the International Bridge. At the bridge, honor guards from both the U.S. and Mexico met in an exchange of international friend ship. After a barbeque dinner at Mar tin High School Saturday after noon, the “Fish” competed . with other teams in the drill team com petition. The A&M team came in third in the college division. The team from Arlington State Col lege won first place’and St. Mai-y’s University, San Antonio, came in second/ This year’s Freshman Drill Team' commander is Royce M. John, freshman from Houston. The Frist Sergeant is D. W. Rhea, freshman fi-om Dallas. Instructors in the Department of Air Science who accompanied the team £q B Laredo werd Capt. Coffin, Capt. D. fe. Allen, T.Sgt. 0. E. Millican, S.Sgt. E. R. Ruther ford, S.Sgt. M. K. Wilson and S.Sgt. David R. Bradley. Accompanying the “Fish” as ad visors were Pat Standi, sophomore from Shreveport, La., Reed Arm strong, sophomore from Shreve port and Glen Jones, junior from Dallas. Intercollegiate Bridge Meet To Be Held in MSC Friday The 19G0 Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament will be held Friday at 7:15 p.m. in the Memorial Student Center and students from more than 125 American and Canadian colleges and universities will be competing for top scores. All competitors will play the same hands, arranged by author and contract bridge authority Geoffrey Mott-Smith, who will also score the tournament results to determine campus, natibhal and regional winners. Prizes will include trophy cups for the colleges winning' the na tional titles, one cup for the college whose players score highest on East-West hands and one cup for the college of the North-South hand winners, according to Wiley Bun- ton, chairman of the MSC bridge committee. Last year 2038 students repre senting 118 colleges in 37 states and Canada participated in the tournament. Teams representing Columbia University and Princeton Univex-sity won the national cham pionship titles and trophy cups. More than a hundred other stu dents won regional and campus honors. The National Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament committee, a part of the Games Committee, Association of College Unions, is interested in developing contract bridge as a supplement to the col legiate social program. Miss Gladys Black, of the MSC food department, is sponsor to the bridge committee and will direct the tournament. Two Poles Of Faith’ Is Of Howard’s Talk From 18 Colleges Talent Scouts Pick Ten ITS Finalists An audition team composed of eight students and two advisors picked the ten top acts from over 150 acts they saw from 18 colleges in five states for the Intercollegi ate Talent Show to be held March 11, at 7 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. The ten acts picked were: The Jokers, a jazz combo from LSU; James Blakey, a fiddler from Sam Houstop State College; Linda Woods from North Texas State playing a marimba; Tappy and Hamp Dickens, a brother and sis ter tap dance act from the Univer sity of Arkansas and Southern State; the Suvans, a quartet from Texas Tech; Suzanne van de Putte, Scientist To Speak At Nuclear Meets The Department of Nuclear En gineering has announced a sched ule of seminars for the months of February and March. The semi nars will be held at 4 p.m. in the Mechanical Engineering Shops, John D. Randall, assistant profes sor in the Department of Mechan ical Engineering, announces. V. S. Bishop, health physicist for the A&M System, will be the speaker at the Feb. 26 and March 4, seminars. His topic will be “Survey of Health Physicists Principles.” Prof. S. 0. Brown, professor in the Department of Biology, will be the speaker at the March 11 semi nar, discussing “The Effect of Low-Dose Chronic Gamma Irradi ation on the Laboratory Animal.” Dr. R. G. Bader, associate pro fessor in the Department of Ocean ography and Meteorology, will be the speaker at the March 18 pro gram. He will talk on “The Use of Isotopes in Determining Ab sorption Isotherms.” “Techniques of High-Level Gam ma Dosimetry,” will be discussed by George M. Krise, associate pro fessor in the Department of Biol ogy, at the March 25 seminar. a Brazilian singer and dancer from SMU; Karol Coin, a torch singer from OSU; C&V Charles, a duet from SLI; Charlotte Coleman, a ballet dancer from Baylor; the Apache Belles from Tyler Jr. College; and Jose Maher, the flamenco guitar artist from A&M. Tickets will go on sale Thursday and may be bought from unit and staff C.O.’s. General admission tickets may be purchased for 75 cents before the show and one dol lar at the door. Reserved seat tickets will cost $1.50 and chil dren’s tickets may be purchased for 50 cents. The audition team was composed of Pete Hardesty and Rosalie Johnson as advisers, and Tommy Lancaster, Bill McClain, Rudy Schubert, Jimmy Roberts, Richard Nagy, Rodney Kelly, Mike Bozardt and David Hughes as student members. Aviation Meeting Being Held in MSC A wide variety of equipment, in addition to outstanding speakers, is among the attractions at the ninth annual Texas Agricultural Aviation Conference and Pest Con trol Short Course now underway at A&M. The equipment, located on the second floor of the MSC, includes airplane accessories, electronic de vices, pilot safety paraphernalia, plane parts, engines, literature on new type agricultural aircraft and chemical application machinery. One booth has information on insurance covering aerial applicat or pilots and their planes. The session will continue through Feb. 23, with a field dem onstration of equipment at Easter- wood Airport. Dr. Wayne G. McCully, associate professor in the Department of Range and Forestry, and confer ence chaii’man, said the meeting is sponsored by the A&M College System,»Texas Aeronautics Com mission, Texas Flying Farmers and Ranchers Assn, and the Texas Aerial Applicators Assn. College Station Council Passes Three Proposals Carolyn Bedford . Fish Ball Sweetheart meeting held last night, according to Ran Boswell, College Station The date was set for the election of city officials, a boai'd of equali zation was named and new tele phone rates were adopted. A mayor and three councilmen, one from each ward, are to be elected at a general municipal election to be called April 5. Voters will go to three polling places in the city to elect the officials. Voters in Ward 1 will go to the Consolidated High School music room to cast their votes, Ward 2 will vote in the office of Culpepper Manning, College Hills, and Ward 3 will cast votes in the City Hall, Boswell said. Persons wishing to file for the office of mayor or councilman must file in the City Hall before March 5, Boswell added. There is no charge for filing. The present mayor of College Station, who is elected at large, is W. Landiss, Ward 1; J. H. Sorrels, Ward 2, and A. P. Boyett, Ward 3. their terms without any monetary compensation, Boswell said. The Council named a three-man board of tax equalization. Named to serve on the board were Dr. H. E. Hampton, Ed Kidd and B. J. Flucker. EditorofAggielan d Asks Information western States Telephone Company rates. Officials of the telephone the rates is past due and that it is essential if telephone service here is to continue to expand. The proposed monthly rate struc ture with present prices in paren thesis follows: One-party business telephone, $12 ($9); two-party business tele phone, $10 ($6.75); business exten sion, $2 ($1.50); one-party resi dence telephone, $6 ($5); two- party residence telephone, $5 ($4); four-party residence telephone $4 changes become policy. Rue Pinalle Slates 3 Acts Bill Nayratil’s band from Brenham, singer Connie Ander son, and Diane Kunz, dancer from Sam Honston State Teach er’s College will provide the en tertainment at Friday’s, Feb. 26, Cafe Rue Pinalle, accord ing to Jimmy Fadal, member of the MSC Dance Committee. As a prelude to the Sopho more Ball to be held the follow ing night. Cafe Rue Pinalle will be held from 8 until 12 p.m. in the lower level of the MSC.- Tickets are $1.25 per couple and are now on sale at the entrance to the lower level. The lower level will be dec orated with a New Orleans theme relating to an “Aggie version” of French nite life. CHS Club Sets Annual Supper For March 3 The Mothers’ and Dads’ Club of A&M Consolidated School has scheduled its annual Community Supper for March 3 in conjunction with Texas Public School Week, Feb..29-March 4. The event will be held again in the school gym nasium in College Station. Last year around 1,200 people were served and an even bigger crowd is forecast this year, accord ing to Mrs. Vergil Clark, chairman of the supper. Serving of the fried chicken menu will begin at 5:30 p.m. Open house and demonstration classes will follow at 7:30 p.m. for grades 6-12. No formal program has been planned for the elementary grades, but parents are invited to attend classes during the week in all the junior and senior high grades. Elementary school visita tion plans are as yet indefinite. Mrs. Clark is being assisted this year by Mrs. W. A. Mixon, Mrs. A. F. Isbell, Mrs. T. E. McAfee, Mrs. R. J. Baldauf, Mrs. Marion Pugh, Mrs. A. M. Sorenson, and Mrs. H. G. Thompson with tickets being handled by Mrs. Ellis Smith and publicity by Mrs. S. E. Brown, Barbara Beasley, and Russell Brown. Tickets for the supper will be sold by Consolidated students with prizes donated by merchants to be awarded for the most sales. Nelson Replaced By Dallas Pastor . By TOMMY HOLBEIN Battalion Staff Writer “The Christian Faith like our planet, has two poles: between them lies our freedom of soul,” said Dr. Herbert R. Howard, convocation speakers for Religious Emphasis Week, in Guion Hall at 10:00 a. m. today. Dr. Howard is replacing Dr. D. M. Nelson, pastor of the First Baptist Church of Greenville, S. C., who was unable to come to A&M this week due to illness. Continuing his speech, Dr. Howard said, “One pole is the image of God in human personality, suggesting God’s dignity and worth, his capacity for spiritual understanding. The other is the faithfulness of the written word.” “We confront then”, the speaker said, “the questions and issues of our times with"* courage. God has revealed Himself perfectly in Christ. Hence, human personality has great potential. Our salvation is a fact, not a possibility.’ Concluding his talk, Dr. Howard said, “We confront our world with wisdom and restraint, for the law of God calls for meekness and discipline under the will of God. The Bible is not out of date, it contains a lamp for our feet. Let us come to terms with it and find our way in it. We do so as we read it intelligently, inquiringly, and reverently.” Dr. Howard was born and raised in Troy, Alabama, and he studied two years at Troy State College, then graduated with an AB degree from Howard College in Birming ham, Alabama, in 1938. After graduating from Howard College, Dr. Howard attended Southern Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, where he graduated with a Th.M. degree in 1941. He went into the Seminary Graduate School, majoring in Christian Ethics and Social Philosophy, from which he obtained his Th.D. degree in 1944. Dr. Howard held a pastorage at the Immanuel Baptist Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, from 1944 until 1948, when he moved to Park City Baptist Church, Dallas, Texas, where he has remained. A mem ber of the Kiwanis Club, Dr. Howard is a past president of the North Dallas Park City Chapter, and is a 32nd degree Mason. “Faith of Our Fathers” was Dr. Howard’s topic for his talk given yesterday in Guion Hall at 11:00 a.m. He said, “The faith of our fathers is the belief that God is, that God has made Himself known, and that how we relate ourselves to God’s revelations of Himself determines our destiny.” “It is significant to note that the doctrine of Islam in Nigeria has come into direct contact with four basic truths of the Christian religion: that Christ was the Son of God, that He was crucified upon a^ cross, was raised from the dead, ij and that He will return again,’’J said Howard. He continued by showing how each of these four truths were related to the “faith of our fathers,” and ending his talk, he said, “That He shall return—it has a beginning and an end, and I don’t know when it will be, but when it comes, it will be the occa sion of the complete victory of the will of God and the perfect estab lishment of His kingdom.” Aggie Players Start Rehearsals? orPlay Rehearsals began last night for the Aggie Player’s production of “The Tender Trap,” according to C. K. Esten, producer for the group. . The three act Broadway comedy will be staged in the Lower Level of the Memorial Student Center April 4.' Harry Gooding will di- dect the play, Esten said. The cast, as announced Monday, include Travis Madole as Charlie Reader, Ray Simmons as Joe, Perry Popa as Earl Linquest, Richard Riser as Sol, Betty Bar bee as Poppy, Libby Alexander as Sylvia, Ramona Yauger as Jessica and Marlene Rushing at Julie. Stage crews will be anounced later, said Esten. The cast for “An Evening With George Bernard Shaw,” to be pre sented April 20, will be announced at a later date also.