The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 19, 1961, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    s
ral
4 a-
l yeste
«t foe
ttete
that
Milner;
■hedule
10 sli f ';
were;
ball as
1; A-li
: -2 ani
on pej,
it A-2,;
Washington Preps For Tomorrow’s Inaugural Ceremonies
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The town
really beagn to bulge, bustle and
buzz Wednesday with people
crowding in for Friday’s inaugu
ration of John F. Kennedy as
president of the United States.
Sprightly, peppery, Harry S. Tru
man, who once lived in the White
House himself, was among them.
The Kennedy clan was gather
ing, too. The president-elect spent
the day in New York before fly
ing down to Washington to start
the rounds of official pre-inaugu
ral events with an appearance at
a reception honoring Vice Presi
dent-elect Lyndon B. Johnson.
Mrs. Kennedy came by plane from
the other direction, from Palm
Beach, Fla.
And, except for carpenters still
pounding on a stately white stand
in front of the White House,
things are about as ready as they
ever will be for the changeover in
administrations. Security agents
have even battened down all the
manholes in the streets along the
Editor Previews
‘Review’ Outlook
Editor Jim Gibson
... confers with Bob Roberts
By JIM GIBSON
Students in the School of Arts and Sciences can look for
these items in the latest edition of the “Texas A&M Review”
due to come out this week.
“The Broader Aspects of Narrowness,” by Gordon D.
Reynolds takes a good-natured >•
poke at the supposedly impractical
aspects of economics.
; Dave Langford’s “0 Men and
Horses,” gives his interpretation
©f how to spot a dude.
“Chickens Instead of Trees” is
Jan Jones’ contribution to the
tSmall Town,” Texas, series in
this issue.
I The need for more scientific
'.writers in fictional science is dis
cussed in Joe S. Ham’s “The Sci
entist on Fiction.”
“On Punctuation”
| “Notes on Punctuation” b y
George Summey, Jr. presents a
IOP
Grad Receives
Promotion
To Capt
am
l Gift
dthenie W
'$
20% Otf
Special to The Battalion
I FORT EUSTIS, Va.—Charles H.
Keilers, Class of ’54 and a student
in the Transportation Officer Ca
reer Course at the U.S. Army
Transportation School, has been
promoted to captain during recent
ceremonies in the commandant’s
office.
i The 28-year-old officer had his
bars pinned on by Brig. Gen. Rob
ert B. Neely, T-School Comman-
lant, and Lt. Col. Cary A. Kennedy,
Jr., Secretary.
I Entering the Army in January,
1955, Capt. Keilers completed the
Officers Basic Course at Ft. Lee,
Va. Before his arrival here as a
student, he was stationed in Korea
with the 151st Transportation De
tachment.
1 Capt. Keilers is a 1950 graduate
, of Roundtop-Carmine Industrial
i High School and is a 1954 alumni
' of A&M.
His parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin H. Keilers of Rt. 1, Box
; 198, Roundtop, Tex. Capt. Keilers
and his wife Barbara make their
residence at 17455 Warwick Blvd.,
: Newport News, Va.
clear and concise introduction to
a practical knowledge of punctua
tion.
Although the role of collegiate
athletics has been often discussed,
Bruce Felker’s “A Matter of Sta
tistics” may open new avenues of
thought.
“Tara Revisited” affords Bryan
Ralph the opportunity to illustrate
both his knowledge of southern
architecture and his artistic talent.
A glimpse of what the life of a
school teacher might have been a
century ago is presented in Vick
Lindley’s poem “From These Few
Volumes.”
Raymond Stover gives his im
pressions of England from a train
window in “For One and Thrup-
ney.”
“Albums on Review” features
the second in the series by Marc
Edwards stressing how to get the
most for your record dollar.
Two well-written, interesting
commentaries by Tom Ned Nickell
and John Baldwin constitute this
issue’s book section.
line of march of the inaugural
parade.
But it looks like chilbain and
goosepimple weather for some of
the gorgeous girls who will be
riding floats. Florida is going to
have seven bathing beauties
aboard an entry depicting the
“Sunshine State.”
The weather man, though, said
it looks now as if there may be
a bit of snow Thursday. And Fri
day will be cold and windy with
the temperature around freezing.
Every train and plane poured
in out-of-towners. Information
booths at terminals, hotels and
motels were mobbed with people
wanting maps, of word on where
to round up that ticket to the in
augural ball that should have ar
rived by mail. Reinforcements
from as far as Chicago came to
the assistance of firms renting
evening apparel.
President Eisenhower held his
last news conference and rolled
through a heavy round of ap
pointments. With less than 48
hours left for him at the White
House, he had the air of a man
who wasn’t exactly unhappy at
the idea of leaving it—only that
a Democrat was moving in.
It was Harry Truman who gave
up the Democratic lease on the
executive mansion eight years
ago. And the 73-year-old Mis
sourian was utterly delighted
that a Democrat will be moving
back in Friday afternoon.
He beamed at welcomers at
Union Station, shook hands ex
uberantly and told everyone in
earshot: “Whenever the Demo
crats are around, you’re in good
company.”
Truman, and Eisenhower have
met only at funerals in the past
eight years. Truman said he has
no plans to meet with his suc
cessor on this visit to Washing
ton. A -meeting with Eisenhower
is about the only thing he will
skip.
There was one other exception
— the opening official event of
the inaugural period. That was a
reception at the National Gallery
of Art Wednesday afternoon for
distinguished ladies—wives of the
incoming Cabinet and such.
In addition to dozens of private
parties on the side, Thursday will
bring a reception for governors,
an inaugural concert featuring
American composers and talent,
and a gala show featuring stage
and movie stars and Democratic
party efforts to raise money to
pay for the campaign debt.
All this is just a prelude to
the solemn, impressive ceremony
for the swearing in of the new
president and then the vice presi
dent before the east front of the
Capitol building at noon Friday.
After that, it’s back to razzle
dazzle and celebration with the
great parade down Pennsylvania
Avenue and an inaugural ball
split into five sections and scat
tered around the city.
With heavy sighs, inaugural
committee members said that at
last they will be able to take
care of everybody who had man
aged by Tuesday to put in his
application and put up his $25 for
a ball ticket.
The Battalion
Volume 59
COLLEGE STATION. TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1961
Number 58
Gagers Attempt Rebound Tonite
Houston Cougars
ProvideOpposition
BY FORMER STUDENTS
$1,000 Scholastic Award
Given Corps Of Cadets
The Association of Former Stu
dents has given $1,000 to the Corps
of Cadets for use in academic
achievement awards for the school
year 1960-61.
The awards will consist of 14
individual $50 cash awards, 22 in
dividual medals and a plaque.
The cash awards will be present
ed to freshrpen and sophomores in
the corps who have made the most
improvement in their grade point
ratios from the mid-semester of
the fall semester to mid-semester
of the spring semester.
Other factors taken into consid
eration in determining winners will
be the ability of a student with a
A&M Supplies Half
Of SPE Material
, SjpNC \
Half of the research reports on petroleum engineering
from U. S. and Canadian colleges and universities, published
by the International Society of Petroleum Engineering dur
ing 1960, originated from A&M, it was reported today by
Dr. Paul Crawford.
Dr. Crawford, assistant director
of the Texas Petroleum Research
Committee’s A&M Division, said
the official journal of the S.P.E.,
the Journal of Petroleum Technol
ogy, published a total of 14 re
search reports during 1960, from
nine colleges and universities in
the U. S. and Canada.
Of this number, he added, six
were from the A&M Division of
the Texas Petroleum Research
Committee, and one from the De
partment of Petroleum Engineer
ing.
Other Publishers
Other educational organizations
publishing technical papers on re
search were the University of Al
berta (Canada), University of
Southern California, University of
California, University of Houston,
Montana School of Mines, North
western University, University of
Pennsylvania and Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
Reports from the A&M Campus
follow:
“Volumes of Liquid Hydrocar
bons at High Temperatures and
Pressures,” G. H. Alani and H. T.
Kennedy.
‘Laboratory Factors Affecting
Waterflood Pattern Performance
and Selection,” Paul B. Crawford.
‘Calculation of Crude-Oil Re
coveries by Steam Injection,” B. L.
Landrum, J. E. Smith and Craw
ford.
Model Studies
“Model Studies for Production-
Injection Well Conversion During
Line-Drive Water Floods,” T. L.
Irby, G. T. Pruitt, H. Ferrel and
Crawford.
“Feasibility of Underground
Storage of Liquified Methane,” D.
A. Flanagan and Crawford.
Effect of Directional Permea
bility on Sweep Efficiency and
Production Capacity,” B. L. Lan
drum and Crawford.
“Equilibrium in the Methane-
Carbon Dioxide-Hydrogen Sulfide-
Sulfur System,” H. T. Kennedy
and D. R. Wieland.
The Soiety of Petroleum Engi
neers is an international organiza
tion of some 13,000 engineers from
oil-producing nations of the world.
lower IQ to improve his grade
point ratio more than a cadet with
a higher IQ.
Interviews may also be used by
the selection committee to break
ties for the awards.
The selection committee is com
posed of Major Edward L. Scott,
Capt. William C. Swindle, Lt.
James L. Faubion, Lt. Charles F.
Hornstein and Cadet Lt. Col. Clay
ton LaGrone. All of the members
are corps tactical officers except
LaGrone who is Corps Scholastic
Officer.
Distribution
The cash awards will be dis
tributed as follows:
Freshmen — 2 awards to arts,
1 award to agriculture, 3 awards
to engineering and 1 to science.
Sophomores — 2 awards to arts, 1
award to agriculture, 3 awards to
engineering and 1 award to science.
Freshmen and sophomores re
ceiving cash awards will also be
given medals to signify their ac
complishments.
To be eligible for awards the
student must be enrolled for a min
imum of 15 semester hours.
Medals will be awarded to the
outstanding scholastic officers and
scholastic sergeants at company
and squadron level from each bri
gade and wing. They will be
awarded on the basis of study con
ditions in the outfit, improvements
in outfit grade point ratios and
general unit scholastic achieve
ments.
A unit award for the best grade
point ratio improvement from mid
fall semester to mid-spring semes
ter will also be given. It consists
of a plaque with the name of the
winner to be added annually.
“These awards are for improve
ment,” LaGrone said.
LaGrone said that the award
program was to stimulate an in
centive in the corps for both indi
vidual and unit scholastic achieve
ments.
Sterile Milk Possibility
Viewed At Dairy Meet
If current research is success
ful, milk companies may someday
produce a completely sterile fluid
product that will keep for two
months without losing quality.
W. M. Roberts, head of dairy
manufacturing at North Carolina
State College and a speaker at the
annual Dairy Manufacturers’ Con
ference which ended yesterday,
said the milk preservation feat
will be accomplished through use
of ultra-high temperature pasteur
ization.
The fluid milk temperature
would be jumped up to 195 to 200
degrees, or even higher, he said.
There may be a slight cooked fla
vor in the product, but this will
pass off soon unless the milk is
scorched.
Direct steam injection shows the
most promise, Roberts told an es
timated 75 persons attending the
conference. Present equipment
can not do the job satisfactorily,
and a change-over to ultra-high
temperature processing would re
quire new facilities.
Roberts said the system will in
crease shelf life of milk, but it
will not cover up effects of bad
sanitary conditions on dairies or
while the product is in transit.
A. V. Moore and I. I. Peters,
professor and associate professor,
respectively, in the Department of
Dairy Science, said the conference
has been held annually since 1934.
The purpose is to bring to dairy
manufacturing representatives the
“best available information on cur
rent developments and problems.”
Conference sponsors are the De
partment of Dairy Science, Texas
Agricultural Experiment Station
and the Texas Agricultural Ex
tension Service.
Football Lettermen Announced
New Nuclear
Engineering
Course Revealed
A course in radiological safety
will be conducted by the Depart
ment of Nuclear Engineering dur
ing the Spring semester of 1961.
The course, conducted by Vernon
S. Bishop, radiological safety offi
cer at A&M, will consist of lectures
and demonstrations concerning the
interactions of nuclear radiations
with matter and especially with
biological systems.
Prerequisites for the course, NE
609, are physics 220, math 308 or
the permission of the instructor.
Included in the course will be a
brief history of radiation damage
and a history of the field of health
physics or radiation protection.
The various units of radiation and
measurement dosage will be thor
oughly covered along with the con
cepts of tolerance amounts of radi
ation exposure.
Dr. J. N. Beasley
. . .“Worthy accomplishment”
A*
Br. Beasley
Finishes Exam
In Pathology
Dr. Joseph N. Beasley of the
School of Veterinary Medicine has
successfully completed the board
examination in veterinary path
ology and has been elected to mem
bership in the American College
of Veterinary Pathologists.
“This is recognized as a truly
worthy accomplishment and re
flects credit upon the School of
Veterinary Medicine as well as
Beasley,” Dr. A. A. Price, Dean of
the School of Yeterinary Medicine,
said today.
The American College of Veter
inary Pathologists was established
in recognition of the need for joint
effort to solve the specialized prob
lems in teaching, research and
practice of veterinary pathologists.
Objectives
The objectives of the ACVP are
to further scientific progress in the
specialty of veterinary pathology;
to establish standards of training
and experience for qualifications
of specialists in veterinary path
ology; to further the recognition
of such qualified specialists by
suitable certification and other
means.
Beasley is a native of Center-
town, Ark. His education includes
degrees or course studies, prevet-
erinary, University of Arkansas,
1942-43; DVM, A&M, 1943-44 and
1946-49; veterinary pathology,
Ohio State University, summers of
1951 and 1952 and MS (veterinary
pathology), A&M, 1955-56.
Other Experiences
His experience includes service
in the army and navy, 1943-46; in
structor at the University of Ar
kansas, 1949-51; A&M, instructor,
1951-52; Livestock Sanitary Board,
Ark., diagnostic laboratory, 1952-
55; A&M graduate assistant in
veterinary pathology, 1955-56 and
assistant professor, veterinary
pathology, 1956 to the present.
He holds memberships in pro
fessional, fraternal, honor and civic
organizations.
Beasley is the author or co-au
thor of many technical publications
including case reports, abstracts
and others. He also has several
theses and works in progress.
By JOE GALLICOATTE
The Aggie Gagers meet the Houston Cougars tonight in
Houston for second time this year in a game that could prove
to be the big test for both teams.
Houston will be going into the game fresh, two surpris
ing wins over topped ranked Bradley and St. Louis while the
Aggies have gone down in defeat in their last two outings
against Texas Tech and Texas.
The Houston club will be tested to see if they can stretch
their streak to three big wins while A&M’s test will be to
pull out of a slump.
It seems that Houston’s Gary Phillips will have his hands
full as he takes on the job of holding dowm A&M’s Carroll
Broussard, the Southwest Con- +-
ference’s leading scorer. Hous
ton’s Coach Guy Lewis had
originally planned to use Don
nie Schverak to guard Brous
sard, but Schverak is having his
own problems with an old knee in
jury, that will likely keep him out
the rest of the season.
If Coach Bob Rogers follows his
recent trends in coping with Phil
lips, he will turn loose one of the
Stanley Twins on him. Last year
Pat Stanley held the Houstonian
to six points, all on free tosses.
Ted Luckenbill poses the big
gest scoring threat to the Aggies
as he has scored 229 points this
season to hold down the top posi-
aion with an average of 16.4.
Phillips is running a close sec
ond with a 14.8 average and will
go into the game with an injured
thumb.
Although Coach Lewis explain
ed that he was dissatisfied with
the Houston teams workouts early
in the week, he said, “We aren’t
going to roll over and play dead.”
Houston’s team as a whole is
(See COUGARS, Page 5)
Foreign Report
Deadline Nears
All foreign students have once
again been reminded of the law re
quiring they report their address
to the Immigration and Naturali
zation Service during the month of
January.
Robert L. Melcher, Foreign Stu
dent Advisor, says this is required
even though the address may not
have changed since the last report
last year.
Foreign students may go to any
Post Office and ask for the Ad
dress Report Card, fill it out and
return it immediately. The card
may not be mailed.
Melcher said he would be glad to
offer any assistance at his office
in Room 27 of Milner Hall.
World Wrap-Up
By The Associated Press
Reds Down U. S. Made Laotian Plane
VIENTIANE, Laos—Pro-Communist forces have shot
down one of the four U. S.-made trainer-fighters of Premier
Prince Baun Gum’s infant air force, a government source
said yesterday. The chance of getting a replacement appeared
remote.
★ ★ ★
Rayburn Ahead In Control Battle
WASHINGTON—House Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas
won a resounding and bloodless first-round victory Wednes
day in his fight for control of the powerful House Rules Com
mittee.
★ ★ ★
Cubans Execute Three More
HAVANA — Three members of the Cuban electrical
union were executed yesterday by Prime Minister Fidel
Castro’s government on charges of sabotage. Announce
ment of the executions appeared in Havana newspapers.
tAt
Stevenson Warns Of U. S. Snags In IT. N.
WASHINGTON—Adlai E. Stevenson, designated am
bassador to the United Nations, warned yesterday that the
United States may run into rebuffs and disappointments in
the U. N., including the ultimate admission of Red China.
★ ★ ★
J.F.K. Adopts Goodwill Program
NEW YORK—President-elect John F. Kennedy adopted
a goodwill program toward Latin America Wednesday by
setting up Puerto Rico as a focal “meeting place and work
shop” for improving relations.
★ ★ ★
Committee Rejects Trust Plan
WASHINGTON—The Senate Armed Services Commit
tee yesterday rejected the $1.1 million trust fund plan of
Secretary of Defense-designate Robert S. McNamara. He
had set it up to avoid possible conflict of interest.