y nth in runs on e bases '(] relief out the e side. ng Bar is tired, f man, n after to Clif- pitcher walk to )itch to on the ■1 walk- Barber ;■ Wor- ime. in and ikes to The Battalion Volume 59 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1960 Number 97 ers A&M’s Cemetery Battalion Staff Writer Tommy Holbein ex- is one of 10 people buried in A&M’s Ceme- amines the headstone on the grave of one- tery. For details op the cemetery see Worth time A&M President L. L. Foster. Foster Mentioning on Page 2. Dinner oi Faculty, Board Aimed at Better Relations A step toward closer relations between the A&M faculty and the A&M College System Board of Directors will be taken April 22 with a dinner in Sbisa Dining Hall Banquet Room, the day before the spring meeting of the Board. In a memorandum from Presi dent Earl Rudder, it was deter mined by the Executive Committee that the most feasible means toward this improved relationship was to conduct “an annual stag dinner of faculty, System personnel of comparable rank to our. faculty and the Board of Directors to be held each year at the spring meet ing of the Board. Since the next Board meeting will be held on April 23, the first such occasion BRAZOS TEACHERS ASSN. TO MEET MONDAY AT 7:30 The April meeting of the Brazos County Teachers Assn, will be held Monday night at 7:30 at Ben Mi lam Elementary School, according to an announcement by Jim Tom House, president of the associa tion. The main item on the agenda will be a symposium conducted by A. R. Denney, chairman of the Brazos County Teacher Ethics and Professional Standards Committee. Assisting Denney will be C. E. Orr, principal of Travis Elementary School, Mrs. C. K. Leighton aad Mrs. A. E. Carrier, teachers at A&M Consolidated Elementary and Lamar Junior High School, re spectively. Denney is principal at Bowie Elementary School. Other items on the agenda will be a report from the nominating committee of the election of new officers for the 1960-61 school year, a report from the delegation that recently attended the Distinct I TSTA meeting in Beaumont and an announcement of building rep resentatives for the 12 county schools. Mrs. S. C. Kirby and other mem bers of the Ben Milam faculty will serve refreshments following the meeting. Mrs. Kirby is chairman of the social committee. be on the evening of April will 22.” Stag, Informal, Dutch Treat The dinner will be stag, informal and a dutch treat. It is slated for 7 p.m. and cost of the meal will be $2. Members of the Board of Direc tors will be asked to form a re ceiving line so members of the teaching staff may meet and greet them. After the reception, mem bers of the Board will be asked to join separate tables for the dinner. H. B. Zachary, president of the Board of Directors, will be asked to make after-dinner remarks. Each dean of the respective schools on the campus and E. L. Angell of the Board have been provided a number of tickets for purchase by personnel in their re spective areas. The number sold will be reported April 15. “Meets With Approval . . Commenting on the event, Presi dent Rudder said, “I sincerely hope that this plan for a social gather ing meets with the approval of all. I personally am looking forward to it. Although attendance is com pletely voluntary, I hope a large number of the faculty will be there.” On Top: Girouard, Hall, Thomas; 17 Posts Filled To Aid In Sciences A&M Students Get Fellowships Six A&M graduate students were awarded fellowships by the National Science Foundation to aid them in their graduate studies in the sciences, mathematics and engineering. Of the 1,190 co-operative grad uate fellowships awarded for the 1960-61 academic year, Hollis C. Boehme, a senior Liberal Arts ma jor from Mabank, received a fel lowship in physics; Michael L. Mc Guire from College Station, a sen ior majoring in chemical engineer ing, received a fellowship in chem istry; and Eddie Reyna, a grad uate student from Bryan received a fellowship in physics. Summer fellowships for grad uate teaching assistants went to James A. Hooks from Tallahassee, Fla., a graduate student in geology who received a fellowship in earth sciences; Stephen V. Jennings, a petroleum engineering graduate student from Allison Park, Pa., Senate Meet Slated at 7:15 The Student Senate will meet tonight in the Senate Chamber of the Memorial Student Center. Included on the Senate agenda are the unfinished business along with reports from the standing committees. Reports will be heard on the Twelfth Man Bowl, the Muster Program, the Outstanding Staff Member and the new business will involve the Aggie Mother of the Year Award and discussion of the meeting after the Muster program. Concerning Adoption of Standards Honor Code Opinions Vary In and By TOMMY HOLBEIN Battalion Staff Writer the past few weeks, the Arts Sciences Council has been studying the possibilities of adopt ing an honor code for the school. When different students within the School of Arts and Sciences were interviewed concerning the adoption of an honor code, varied opinions were expressed. Jim Riley, junior journalism ma jor from Houston living in Dorm 17, said, “I feel that honor begins with the individual, and because of this, I am against the code being accepted by the School of Arts and Sciences. If the indi vidual student doesn’t have honor. It won’t be instilled in him by hav ing an honor code.” ‘if it were established. . .’ “Besides,” said Riley, “I don’t think anyone who does cheat wants his buddies to see him, be cause he knows it is dishonorable. He tries to remain unexposed, any way, so the honor code would not be a great thwart to dishonesty in such a case. But if it were es tablished, I would be willing to give it a try, and follow it.” Alan B. Caldwell, junior historj major from Houston living in Pur year, said, “I’d vote against it because I believe in the theory that it is someone else’s busines: if he wants to cheat, not my own I don’t believe that I could report anyone for cheating, and I fee that the professor should accept it as his duty to prevent dishonest; from happening in the classroom Asked if he would support tin honor code if it were established, and why, Rush McGinty, junior pre-law major from Abilene living in Dorm 16, said, “Yes, I would definitely support it. I think ba sically the idea of an honor code within the School of Arts and Sci ences is a very good thing, and if it were established, it would do a lot of good for the School and its various departments.” “It will be hard to regulate at first, because a certain per cent of students who will try to take advantage of it. But if students will back it, with the help of the professors, it will do a great deal oward cutting down on cheating on the part of students within the School, of Arts and Sciences. The honor code will give Aggies the basic pespect for honesty in the work we take credit for, and the espect of the work of our fellow tudents. If you don’t try to help /our fellow student by pointing out lis wrongs to him, you are hurting lim,” said McGinty. Richard Alvarado, sophomore listory major from San Antonio, .aid, “A&M definitely needs an lonor code, but the whole student •ody needs to be conditioned to ccept it, and this is true of stu- lents in the School of Arts and Sciences just like any other school. )ver the years, the tradition has