The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 02, 1961, Image 1

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    iting
igli
Volume 65)
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1961
Number 76
C
A&M-Hoss Meet in Finale
SWC Standings
Remain Uncertain
By JOE CALLICOATTE
The Texas Aggie basketball team will end their regular
season of play tonight as they meet the Arkansas Razorbacks
in Fayetteville, but what happens after that still remains to
be seen.
Whatever happens tonight, one thing is definite—Texas
Tech will get a share in the Southwest Conference crown even
if they lose to Texas in Lubbock.
If history had a bearing on tonight’s game with Arkan
sas, A&M would have a much better chance since Coach Bob
Rogers’ teams have beaten the Razorbacks five out of seven
times during the four years Rogers has been at A&M. How
ever, it is a well-established fact that the Razorbacks are
among the “toughest” on
their home court.
Visitors Review Air Force Cadets
The Air Force ROTC members of the Corps
Staff pass before the reviewing stand at
yesterday’s review for a visiting Air Force
inspection team from Maxwell Air Force
in Alabama. Col. Joseph Stenglein, assist
ant commandant, AFROTC, Headquarters,
805th AFROTC Air Division, Maxwell Air
Force Base, convened the two-day confer
ence.
Columnist Praises Students
For Interest, Intelligence
(Editors Note: The following
irticle appeared in The Houston
Post under the by-line of columnist
Jim Clark. Clark has attended one
of the many conferences held on
tampus annually and we feel his
lords of praise offer an unusual
side-light to the usual praises of
fered the college.)
By JIM CLARK
The Houston Post
If you are the type of citizen
rho fears that all of our univer
sities and colleges are manned
nth professors and students who
ire gullible enough to fall for such
iripe, take a visit to the campus
if The Texas Agricultural and
Hechanical College and get a
heath of fresh air.
IFK Orders
Creation Of
Peace Corps
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON—President Ken
nedy Wednesday ordered creation
f f a Peace Corps on a temporary
bis and asked Congress to make
it permanent. And he cautioned
ftose who want to join that their
life will not be easy.
The volunteer Peace Corps,
Kennedy said, will provide a pool
Americans—mostly young men
‘id women—to go overseas and
“help foreign countries meet their
lr gent need for skilled manpower.”
"embers of the corps, he said,
’"ill go only to those countries
?l iere their services and skills are
nuinely needed and desired.”
Applicants will be screened care-
%, he said, “to make sure that
''se who are selected can con
fute to Peace Corps programs,
I have the personal qualities
ch will enable them to repre-
f the United States abroad with
.fir and dignity.”
feation of the corps, espoused
Kennedy during the presiden-
campaign, was announced at
news conference. He said he
doing so on a “temporary
1 °t basis.” And he sent Congress
"essage asking that it be made
ermanent organization under
' State Department as part of
" e mutual security program,
v’nnedy said he hopes to send
'■ first members of the corps
Aerseas by late fall and hopes to
Mve 500 to 1,000 in the ^ield by
^ «nd of the year. Within a few
i^rs, the President said, he hopes
£'>ral thousand will he working
Jreign lands.
Last week it was my privilege
to address a group of students of
the earth science at the giant col
lege located in the gently rolling
country known as the Brazos Bot
tomland.
It is an institution which has
produced some of not only the na
tion's but the world’s' noted geol
ogists and engineers. For in
stance, the petroleum ministries
of almost every country in South
America included geological engi
neers with Texas A&M degrees.
The subject of my talk at A&M
was purely non-controversial. I
confined my remarks to unusual
and amusing incidents which oc
curred during the significant oil
boom at Spindletop in 1901.
Non-Controversial
While this totally non-contro
versial talk got a respectable re
ception and produced a few laughs^
the questions afterwards were on
subjects such as the proposed Na
tional Fuels Policy, percentage de
pletion, imports of oil and con
servation.
Not only were the students and
instructors interested, but they
demonstrated even more under
standing than you can find in an
average audience of oilmen in
some kind of convention assembled.
Their reaction to my answers
(which I think would have irriated
and aggravated a Harvard assem
bly of the same type) was sym
pathetic and intelligent.
Prior to the meeting I was the
guest of a group of students and
professors in the engineering and
geology schools for dinner and it
was there that I was able to de
tect a healthy attitude toward na
tional problems, constitutional
government and the future of the
world and individual freedom.
There was none of that pseudo-in
tellectual stuff that I had been
led to believe was enveloping the
atmosphere of our great centers
of learning today.
Intense Interest
It is true that both the young
men and their instructors con
veyed an intense interest in better
human relations and a more in
telligent approach to some of the
overwhelming problems of the day,
but I was impressed with their
attitude toward the particular type
of Harvard professor who seems
to be trying to impose his wild
economic notions on an unsus
pecting public. The A&M earth
science men don’t look on this with
great favor, but they do take it
with a grain of salt.
They agreed that what was hap
pening now in Washington with
Harvard professors was probably
temporary and that as soon as the
President discovers what a pre
dicament they will get him into
with the whole public that he will
gracefully ease them out.
But there was no criticism of ;
President Kennedy for selecting
these cronies from his Alma Ma
ter. They concluded that it might
be as if Rep. Olon Teague (a Tex
as Congressman with a degree
from A&M) had been elected Pres
ident and surrounded himself with
a coterie of Texas Aggies for ad
visors. They hoped, however, that
“Tiger” Teague’s team would do
less harm to the Constitution and
might, therefore, last longer.
The point to all of this is that
of Texas A&M is an example of
the average college campus in this
country today, someone has been
misleading a lot of us about the
pink complexion of both profes
sors and undergraduates.
Besides being the last game
on A&M’s schedule, tonight’s
contest will be the finale for
four Aggie seniors. Elliott Craig
is the only man who came to A&M
as a Fish and gone on to win him
self three varsity letters. Pat and
Don Stanley came in their junior
year from Kilgore Junior College,
and their latest accomplishment is
a berth on the All-SWC second
team. Wayne Arnett is the fourth
man that finishes tonight as he
came from Paris Junior College
the same year that the Stanley’s
did. All three of the junior college
transfers have started for the last
two seasons.
As for what else that will be
happening in the SWC tonight and
what will result from the out-
Texas Tech leads by a game, but
if it' loses to Texas, it will be tied
by fhe winner of the Arkansas-
A&M game. If A&M wins at
Fayetteville, there would be a one-
game playoff on a neutral court
to determine the NCAA contender.
The reason for this is because
A&M and Tech split in their two
conference meetings.
D. Stanley
But, if Arkansas should beat
A&M and tie Tech for the title,
then Tech would automatically get
the NCAA bid because it beat
Arkansas in both games.
However, Tech can do away with
a playoff of any kind, if it wins
over Texas because it would be an
undisputed champion.
RITES HELD TODAY
Dr. C. B. Campbell
Claimed By Death
Dr. C. B. Campbell, 83, Professor Emeritus of the De
partment of Modern Languages, died at his home in College
Station at 4 a. m. yesterday. Campbell had been in ill health
for sometime.
A native of Areola, 111., Camp-> :
hell came to A&M in 1903 as an
instructor in Modern Languages.
In 1905 he was made associate pro
fessor and acting head and in 1908
he was named head of the depart
ment.
Campbell was one of the most
widely known and highly respec
ted educators in his field. At the
age of 70 he took up painting as
a hobby and his paintings were
widely exhibited and recognized
with a number of awards. Music
was also a lifelong hobby of Camp
bell.
He held an undergraduate degree
from DePauw University, 1900,
and received his Doctorate from
the University of Chicago in 1912.
He also attended the University
of Berlin, University of Guadala
jara, Mexico and the University
of Grenoble, France.
Campbell was on leave from
1910 to 1914 in which year he re
turned to the department and
served as head until 1948 at which
time he retired.
He was a 32nd degree Mason,
an elder in the Presbyterian
Church of College Station and ac
tive in civic and church work. He
was a member of Phi Delta Theta,
the Acacia Fraterinity, Phi Beta
Kappa and an honorary member
of Phi Kappa Phi.
Among his contributions was a
history of the Department of Mod
ern Languages at the College and
material for the College Archives.
Services were held this after-
nooft at 3 p.m. in the Presbyterian
Church of College Station. The
Rev. Norman Anderson officiated.
Burial was in the College Station
Cemetery under the direction of
the Calloway-Jones Funeral Home.
Campbell is survived by his wife,
a son, C. B. Campbell Jr. of Mid
land and a daughter, Mrs. Peggy
Campbell Owens of College Sta
tion, and four grandchildren.
Pallbearers were John Paul Ab
bott, G. W. Adriance, Phillip
Goode, Charles Roeber, Adihan
Hall of Houston and J. J. Woolket.
Honorary pallbearers were John B.
Bagley, Tom Benson of San Mar
cos; D. B. Gofer, Dr. A. G. McGill,
A1 B. Nelson, Henderson Shuffler,
Fred Lewis and Walter Cardwell
of Lockhart.
Broussard Nears Scoring Mark—Page 6
P. Stanley
Craig
School Menu
Invaded By
Space Ag
e
By The Associated Press
COLUMBIA, S. C.—Space age
or not, parents here are having
a time figuring out just what their
children had for lunch in school.
Recent menus, printed daily in
the newspapers include: Pluto dog
in radar sauce, cosmic corn, toma
to and onion orbit, satellite su
preme cake and mil^y way with
flying saucers.
The only thing to escape the
new terminology was the beverage
—milk.
SHOW SCHEDULED TONIGHT
Ballet Theatre
Hits Town Hall
By TOMMY HOLBEIN
Direct from their triumphant tour of Russia and 13
other countries, the American Ballet Theatre will appear on
Town Hall tonight in G. Rollie White Coliseum starting at
8 p. m.
Four ballets will be presented
by the internationally-famous
group of artists, including “Grad
uation Ball,” “Points on Jazz,”
“The Combat” and “Pas De Deux.”
“Graduation Ball,’ the gayest of
all ballets, will be perfqrmed by
the young and spirited members
of the Theater; this section of the
World Wrap-Up
By The Associated Press
Disappearance Of Children Investigated
RICHMOND, Va.—Six children of carnival worker Ken
neth Dudley left home with their parents in 1958 and five
died “and were disposed of” over the next four years in sev
eral widely separated states, police said Wednesday night.
A state police investigator said all the Dudley children
evidently died of malnutrition and neglect as they rode with
their parents from one carnival job to another “from Maine
to Florida and from Florida to California and back.”
Air Force Mulls Defense Changes
WASHINGTON—Sen. William Blakeley, D-Tex., said
Wednesday Air Force Secretary Eugene Zuckert has pro
mised Texas full consideration before any Air Force install
ations or contract defense plants undergo chances.
He said the Air Force secretary promised that Texas
would participate fully in the defense program.
★ ★ ★
Flooding Rivers Ravage South
Mighty rivers on a late winter rampage surged through
south-central sections of Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi
Wednesday, leaving wide trails of muddy ruin amounting to
millions.
Except around Jackson, Miss., the highest levels of the
flooding rivers were spread largely across rural areas as they
continued toward their common draining point, the Gulf of
Mexico.
California Mail Truck Held Up
WEAVERVILLE, Calif.—Two men and a woman held
up a U. S. mail truck on a winding mountain road yesterday
and stole $8,500 to $10,000 in cash to be paid to jobless men
in Hayfork, Calif.
“We’ve been expecting this but have tried to keep the
amount of money shipped quiet,” said Mrs. Malcolm Baldwin
of Hayfork, whose husband dispenses state unemployment
benefits.
★ ★ ★
Russians Give Hess Privileges
WIESBADEN, Germany—Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s former
dputy, gets special treatment from the Russians in Spandau
war crimes prison, the newspaper Weisbadener Kurier said
Wednesday.
It said Hess is allowed to leave his cell for as long as 24
hours at a time to travel to Karlshorst, an East Berlin suburb
where Soviet headquarters in East Germany are located.
program, lasting 38 minutes, in
cludes feats of perfection in ar
tistic motion on stage.
“Point On Jazz” is a refreshing
new ballet and the group’s world
premiere. The music was written
by Dave Brubeck, with choreo
graphy by Dania Krupska. Scen
ery and costumes were designed
bv co-director Oliver Smith, of
“My Fair Lady” and “Camelot”
fame.
Ballerina Stars
“The Combat,” lasting 18 min
utes, provides the ballerina with
opportunities for technically bril
liant drmoing and emotional act
ing. The ballet is William Dollar’s
intensly dramatic work, and the
score was written by Italy’s Raf-
faelo de Banfield. The striking
scenery and costumes are the pro<
ducts of Georges Wakhevitch, sen
sational new French designer.
“Pas De Deux” is also an intri
cate, graceful ballet presenting the
full talent of the young performers
devoted to performing ballet in
the most classical style and per
fection.
The American Ballet Theatre
holds many firsts in its records,
and for many years has been the
true representative of our country
in the field of ballet.
For example, it was the first
American ballet company ever to
perform in Russia, having accomp
lished this only last year. In 19G(\
the group gave 35 perfomances in
six weeks, and an estimated 118,-
000 Russians saw them in four
cities.
High Prestige
Through its constant work in
building artistic perfection in per
formances, the American Ballet
Theater has gained high interna
tional prestige and status un
matched because of its diversified
repertory in both classical and con
temporary ballets. It holds an
established record for perform
ances in 235 American cities in
48 states at home and in 37 coun
tries abroad.
Ninety-six ballets have been pi
duced by the American Ballet Th
atre, and 31 were given the
world premieres by the compart
ITS Promising To Be
Biggest And Best Ever
Bigger and better than ever, the
annual Intercollegiate Talent 2>how
will be held in G. Rollie White Col
iseum on Friday night, Mar. 10,
featuring 10 big acts of outstand
ing talent from across the South
west.
Opening feature of the show
will be a grand entrance by the
Kilgore Rangerettes, famed girls’
dr’ill team from Kilgore Junior
College who have risen to inter
national fame in the past few
years.
Accompanying music will be pro
vided by the “big new sound” of
the Aggieland Orchestra, playing
in full sterio equipment which in
cludes eight microphones and
speakers. The apparatus is very
similar to that used by Ray Con-
niff in his “Concert In Stereo”
presented last November.
This equipment is being assem
bled by Albert Thielmann, main
tenance supervisor of the Memo
rial Student Center, who will work
dial controls during the perform
ances to keep a balance among
different sections of the orchestra.
Ten Other Acts
Besides the orchestra and Ran
gerettes, the ITS will spotlight
10 special acts by college students
from a four-state area, making
the show the largest of its kind
in this part of the country.
Among the performers will be
Miss Sandra Chuddy, from Louisi
ana State University, who has held
the titles of Miss New Jersey,
Miss Centennial of LSU, the col
lege homecoming queen, LSU
Gumbo Beauty for three years
and Miss Wildwood Beach, N. J.
Also from LSU will be “The
Jokers,” a musical group that is
no newcomer to the Intercollegiate
Talent Show. Last year, the group
“brought the house down” with
their rendition of “Cherry Pie”
and other arrangements.
The Jokers will be in the Me
morial Student Center Fountain
Room Friday morning, and plan
to eat in an Aggie Mess Hall dur
ing the day.
A third group from Louisiana
State University will be tl 4
vert Quartet, from the Sr
pha Epsilon fraternity.
Second AppearriJ^^
Lolly Kremier, from
as State College, will
ond performance oij. "J n
campus in the past\_L4C
Friday night, havin
peared with the NTS
Feb. 16. _
Miss Kremier is a :
jazz singer from W.
and is classified as a sJjAW
vertising art major;
she has been first
the Texas Junior Miss’
placed first in the Chi
ent show.
Miss Kremier was
for several encores durin’i
formance here two weeks-
much can be expected oN
ITS night. V
Representing A&M wi
Charles Marshall, a junior pi
major from Kingsville. Mar
was first-place winner in the