The Battalion Volume 59 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1960 Number 15 Texas Supreme Court Rules 4 No Co-eds’ Mysterious Project Behind Dorm 1 ... causing inquiries EXCAVATIONS NUMEROUS Campus Construction Work Begins Year In Full Swing In the past several weeks, the campus has been covered with new construction projects, extending from north to south and all in be tween. A center of construction activity is the area surrounding the Physics Building and Military Science Building, where new wings are being added to both, simul taneously. These wings are being built by the Stokes Construction Company, which has blocked the street run ning between the two buildings to hold equipment for the jobs. The addition to the Military Science Building will house Mod- nm, air conditioned classrooms for military science instruction, ac cording to Col. Joe E. Davis, Com mandant. Davis said the class rooms in the three-level structure will house 35-40 student classes, and several will have folding panels, making it possible to seat approximately 100 students at one time for instruction purposes. The new physics wing, to be completed by next June, will be four stories high, and its capacity will be nearly as great as the two old wings combined, according to Dr. J. T. Potter, head of the De partment of Physics. Potter said the new building will be used exclusively for advanced laboratories and physics research. Totally air-conditioned, the new building will also house two large demonstration lecture rooms, each with a seating capacity of 150 students. Construction on a new plant science building has begun in the vacant area east of the Biological Sciences Building. This new build ing will contain all modern facili ties for plant science research, and will take well over a year to com plete, according to Raymond L. Rogers, of the Building and Campus Utilities. White Elephant? “Behind Dormitory 1, across from the greenhouses, lies a large, gapping excavation rumored to be everything from a new swimming pool for the cadet area to a water trap for the golf course,” said Rogers. “Actually, this is a location of about 100 square yards where the top soil has been pushed away, Trigon Project ... heading campus construction leaving a place for the clay from the various other excavation sites on the campus. “$'e plan to put the clay from the Militatry Science wing, Physics Building wing and Plant Science Building and put it in the ground here. This is good clay, and when covered with the top soil now lying in great mounds around the area, it will help level out the low area there, and will furnish good, rich undersoil for grass to grow,” said Rogers. Other major improvements in the physical plant of the college include continuation of street curb and guttering, and resurfacing. Street Repairs Major repairs on streets are taking place on the street in front of the Exchange store, running be tween Milner hall and the. Military property.. New curbing and gutter ing are being installed, and an asphalt top will comprise the sur facing. Also, a new, wide sidewalk is being built, said Rogers. After the work crew is finished with this project, they will begin curbing and guttering the street east of the power plant, making the street of solid concrete slab, he added. In the dormitories and other buildings, roof repairs continue; at present, a crew is working on the roof of the YMCA building. A&M Accepts UofH Apology For Incident The University of Houston student body this week apolo gized to the A&M student body for the unsportsmanlike con duct displayed toward A&M last Saturday at the Cadet- Cougar grid clash in Rice Stadium. ♦" The apology was accepted by m I^T 1 A&M student leaders and deemed 1 wo A anted A&M Rhodes Finalists Two candidates for Rhodes Scholarships to Oxford University have been selected to represent A&M in state competition, accord ing to Dr. Richard H. Ballinger, Rhodes representative for the col lege. The two men are Donald R. Cloud, 1959 graduate majoring in economics, and Aubrey C. Elkins, a senior majoring in English. Cloud, who was cadet corps com mander his senior year, is from Kerens, and plans to study juris prudence (law) at Oxford if select ed as a Rhodes Scholar. Elkins, from Fremont, Tex., is commander of the White Band, and plans to study English at the world-renown university. Competition is very high among students for Rhodes scholarships, said Ballinger. He said the first step is the state level, where candi dates of the different colleges and universities in the state compete for selection of two to ( represent the state in district competition Most dsitricts in the U. S. have six to eight states, and from the approximated 16 candidates, four are selected from each district. This means that each year, 32 men in the country are selected as Rhodes scholars to attend Oxford University in England, said Ballin ger. In the past years, A&M has had two men continue their studies after graduation at Oxford as Rhodes scholars. The first was Charles Wright Thomas, who graduated in 1922 with a B.S. in chemical engineering. He studied English at Oxford, and is presently head of the Department of English at New York State Teacher’s Col lege in Courtland, N. Y. The second was Jack Edward Brooks, who received a B.S. in electrical engineering in 1947, and continued to study physics at Ox ford. Brooks is now on the techni cal staff of Ramo-Woolridge Corp. a forgotten matter. Apology came first from two U of H cheerleaders who visited the campus and met with A&M student leaders. The cheerleaders, Phillip D. Kelly and Sam. E. Wood, both sophomores, said they came without incentive from the U of H administration and wanted to apologize for their actions in leading yells against the A&M student body. A formal apology came yester day in a letter addressed to Ro land Dommert, president of the Student Senate, expressing regret for the Saturday actions. Kelly, head cheerleader, said in the meeting on the A&M campus that the “spirit at the University of Houston runs high for the A&M game, since we consider A&M one of our top rivals.” He explained there was no in tent to defame the A&M student body, but that they were exploit ing the spirit generated for the contest won by the Cougars, 17-0. “The last time spirit was that high,” Wood recalled, “was when the University of Houston beat A&M two years ago.” Both of the U of H cheerleaders said there would be no repeat of such actions in future A&M-Uni- versity of Houston athletic con tests. The apology was accepted by Syd Heaton, Corps Commander, Mike Carlo, president of the Ci vilian Student Council, John Har rington, Corps Intelligence Offi- mer, Sonny Todd, head yell leader, and Bill Hicklin, editor of The Battalion. Judging Team Planning Trip To Chicago The A&M Dairy Products Judg ing Team will leave Oct. 26 to compete in the 26th Collegiate Students’ International Dairy Prod ucts Judging Contest Oct. 31 in Chicago. Team members will match skills with about 30 other teams repre senting colleges and • universities throughout the United States. Making the trip will be James W. Bennett of Bryan, Alvin Louis Novosad of Wheelock, Jimmie C. Hagler of College Station and Joel Gambrell of Copeville. All are seniors in dairy manufacturing. Dr. A. V. Moore, professor of dairy science and team coach, said that enroute to the international contest the group will compete in a regional dairy products judging event Oct. 28 at Louisville, Ky. The Aggies will be among 10 teams from southern schools. Dr. Moore said dairy products judging mainly involves flavor evaluation of American cheese, vanilla ice cream, butter and market milk. He said it is a diffi cult task and requires extensive training. Marketing Group Selects Officers For New Year Officers for the coming year were elected recently by the Mar keting Society in an organizational meeting. Named to the positions were Dick Meyer, president; Richai-d L. Smith, vice president; Homer L. Denning, secretary; Willis White, treasurer; Gary Anderson, junior representative to the Arts & Sci ences Council; Cliff Jones, senior representative to the Arts & Sci ences Council; Jim Simpson, pro gram committee chairman, and Da vid Anderson and Harvey Jones, program committee members. Annual Conference To Begin Monday The seventeenth annual Junior College Conference will be held Monday and Tuesday in the Memorial Student Cen ter, according to Dr. C. H. Ransdell, chairman of the Junior College Relations Committee. Registration for the conference-f will be held in the Serpentine Lounge of the MSC starting at 8 a.m. Monday. A $3 registration Farm Bureau Prexy Speaks Wednesday To Great Issues (See Picture On Page 6) Charles B. Shuman, president of the American Farm Bureau Fed eration, has been revealed as the initial speaker of the A&M Great Issues Series. Shuman will speak at 8 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. The Farm Bu reau president will arrive at A&M by plane Wednesday afternoon and leave early Thursday morning for Houston. Tickets for Shuman’s address will sell for $1 while student ac tivity cards will get students into the Ballroom. Shuman’s topic will be “What Should Be The Future Agricul tural Policy Of This Nation?” Joe Bindley, chairman of the MSC Directorate’s Great Issues Committee, has announced no speakers have been definitely con firmed after Shuman. Shuman, a stock and grain farmer of Sullivan, 111., lives on and actively participates in the farming operations of his 270-acre farm near Sullivan. The home farm has been in the Shuman fam ily since 1853. Since graduation from the Uni versity of Illinois, Shuman has been active in Farm Bureau, co operative and community affairs. He was elected a director of the Moultrie County Farm Bureau in 1932 and its president in 1934. He served as County President un til 1938. He was elected to the Illinois Agricultural Assn. Board of Directors in 1941 and was named President of IAA in Nov. 1945, when Earl C. Smith, IAA President, retired. He was elected to the American Farm Bureau Federation Board of Directors in 1945 and to the Presidency of AFBF in Dec. 1954, following the retirement of Allan B. Kline. Shuman was re-elected for a two-year term at the Dec. 1957 Federation Convention in Chicago. Shuman has served as director of two production credit associa tions and later as president of one. He was vice-president and later president of a rural electric coop erative and served as director and secretary of a livestock shipping association. For many years he was a di rector of the rural school he at tended as a boy and served as President of the Community Con solidated District 3. The school he attended was merged with four other districts to make the consoli dated district. Shuman played an important part in bringing about school organization in his county. Shuman has five children: Charles W., who operates the home farm, twin sons, John and Paul, who are in college, Janet, in high school and an infant son, George. fee will be charged, and confer ence members will be asked to purchase their conference luncheon and dinner tickets when they reg ister. Monday morning, following the invocation and wecome to A&M, Dr. John W. Oswald, assistant vice-president, state-wide, Univer sity of California, will speak on “Higher Education, Servant and Leader of Society.” A discussion will follow his address. At 11 a.m., Dr. Alfred R. Neu mann, Dean of the College of Arts and Science, University of Hous ton, will speak on “What Should Be Done To Meet The Impending Shortage of College Teachers of History and English,” followed by a discussion. An informal luncheon and fel lowship for conference participants will be held in Rooms 2-A and 2-B of the MSC starting at 12:20 p.m. Two Discussions The afternoon portion of the conference will be divided into two discussions, one on history and the other on English. Both sessions will begin at 1:15 p.m. Dr. J. M. Nance, Head of the Department of History, will pre side over the history discussion. Members of the panel will be Billy Jones, of San Angelo College, and (See CONFERENCE on Page 6) JJ. S. Court Next Stop For Women By BOB SLOAN Battalion News Editor Texas A&M will remain an all-male school! This was the ruling of the Texas Supreme Court in Aus tin Wednesday, making final decisions of several lower Texas courts. The highest court in the state said it could find nothing wrong in the action taken by the Waco Court of Civil Appeals last June 9. The Waco court had turned down the appeal of three Bryan women for a rehearing on their suit against A&M for admission. John M. Barron, attorney for the women, said in Bryan Wednesday night the Supreme Court decision was nothing but a formality clearing the way for him to approach the United States Supreme Court."* —* “I had no more chance of winning my case in Texas than Khrushchev would have of winning an election for justice of the peace in this county,” he said. Barron said he had already filed an appeal with the Texas Supreme Court, but this, too, was “just a formality.” U. S. Supreme Court He said he planned to take the case to the U. S. Supreme Court on a constitutional question raised in the suit. The case will be based on the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution concerning equal pro tection of women under the law. The 14th Amendment reads in part: “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State . . . deny to any person . . . (die equal protection of the laws.” \ Attorney General Comments Leonard Passmore, lawyer in the attorney general’s office, said the ruling meant only that the appeal court’s ruling would stand and A&M would remain all-male. “Barron’s- next move would be an appeal to the Texas Supreme Court, then the case would go to the U. S. Supreme Court,” he said. Passmore said the attorney gen eral’s office would back the A&M Board of Directors all the way in the fight. The original suit from which the several appeals were made and de-i nied was filed by Margaret E.’ Allred, Sarah C. Hutto and Mary Ann Parker. All three claimed A&M did not have the right to refuse them admission because of their sex. However, a question arose last May 19 when the Waco Court of Civil Appeals turned down Miss Allred’s appeal. Miss Allred said she wanted to major in floriculture (See COEDS on Page 6) Corps Trip, Bonfire Head CSC Agenda More advanced plans for the Dallas Corps Trip and the annual Thanksgiving Bonfire will head the agenda for tonight’s Civilian Student Council meeting at 7:30 in the Senate Chamber of the Me morial Student Center. The advanced agenda for the meeting, released yesterday by Secretary David L. Beauchamp, included a report on the Aggie Sweetheart Selection, a report from the Civilian Dress Committee and other reports from the ab sentee ballot committee, treasurer, traffic committee ahd election and constitutional committee. In the last Civilian Student Council meeting, held Sept. 22, the proposed handling of absentee vot ing took the spotlight. William O. Richards, who pre sented a plan to the council in the last meeting, proposed the group could best handle the voting as a group. Dallas Party Ducat Deadline Extended A new deadline has been set for purchasing tickets to the Dallas Corps Trip Party the night of Nov. 5 in the huge Dallas Memorial Auditorium. Syd Heaton, Corps Commander, announced yesterday Aggies have until 5 p.m. next Wednesday to purchase their $4 tickets. He explained the delay in con tract checks arriving as the reason for the new deadline. World Wrap-Up By The Associated Press Germans Will Keep Atomic Secrets BONN, Germany—The West German government said Wednesday it has agreed to a U. S. request to keep secret new developments in methods for refining raw materials used in nuclear weapons. Foreign Office and Atomic Energy Ministry spokesmen said the developments are based on the so-called ultracentrifugal process. The development had raised fears in Washington that fissionable uranium could be made cheaply enough for a dozen or more nations to manufacture their own atomic bombs. ★ ★ ★ English Demonstrate At NATO Leader’s Talk COVENTRY, England—Scores of police were called Wednesday night after crowds of jeering, whistling demonstrators tried to break up a public meeting addressed by Gen. Lauris Norstad, NATO supreme commander in Europe. The demonstration was pitched on the antinu clear arms theme. With a bleak smile, Norstad stood silently on the platform for 45 minutes while officials tried to get the audience under control. The outburst seemed to be carefully planned demonstration against the American general, who was paying a one-day visit to this bomb- scarred English city from his headquarters in Paris. ★ ★ ★ Nixon Has Nose Troubles HOLLYWOOD—“My trouble,” the vice president of the United States said Wednesday, is my nose.” Richard M. Nixon, tht Republican presidential candidate, often seen on TV these days, was discussing makeup problems with other leading lights of the medium. One of the actors commented Nixon doesn’t look tired in person but sometimes appears fatigued on television. Nixon replied with a laugh: “I never look tired. It’s those darned lights. My trouble is my nose.”