The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 21, 1961, Image 2
Page 2 College Station, Texas March 21, 1961 THE BATTALION OBSERVATION OF A&M EDUCATION OFFICER CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earip, Houston Just 30 Minutes From Moscow <EUs Am ^ i la *W'M i lit. / “ . . . it’s embarassing not to know whether to say ‘college’ or ‘university’ or even ‘A&M’.” Sound Off ‘Evil to him... ’ (Editor’s note: the following letter refers to recent campus art exhibits in which nude paint ings hare been censored). protected the student body from . y-ik /• mi another lewd and obscene display ^4. Note Of ThcmtCS of indecency. Certainly we can Editor, The Battalion: I notice that another nude painting has mysteriously disap peared from the hallowed walls of this great institution of high er learning. It is comforting to be reassured that in this 20th Century democracy, there is still one last refuge where it’s still the good old days and where Vic torian prudery and Machiavellian politics still run rampant. Our good ostrich administra tion, bowing to the wails of out raged piety, has again saved and be proud of the progress we are making here, and we can look forwai’d to new achievements in the field of censorship with eager anticipation. (Perhaps even a book-burning with torchlight pa rades ?) Evil to him who evil thinks! Dan R. Brents, ’61 (Editor’s note: the following note was written by Barney Welch, former Intramural Direc tor here at Texas A&M. Welch made a special request to The Battalion to have this letter of thanks printed, since he has now taken a position with an insur ance firm). Editor, The Battalion: I wish to take this opportunity of thanking each of you for the beautiful watch presented to me at the banquet on March 16, 1961. I hope that I may have the op portunity of thanking each of you personally before the semester is out, but if not, then I will simply say “Thank You” through this letter. REVIVAL March 19 Thru 23 7:30 p. m. Each Evening Music Under Direction of ROBERT L. BOONE DR. CHAS. L. ALLEN 1st. Methodist Church, Houston Gi:eat Preacher—Noted Author and Distinguished Newspaper Columnist A&M Methodist Church College Station, Texas It was not only the watch and the banquet, but the thoughtful ness that I appreciated so much. I had the most pleasant associa tion with the most wonderful group of men for 14 years here on the campus and my greatest regret in leaving the Intramural Department was the realization that I would lose the close con tact with so many fine young men. I especially wish to thank Ray Whitmire and Berry Cash for their interest and thoughtfulness and also the Athletic Officers and their assistants for their fine fellowship which made that par ticular evening the most impres sive evening of my life. Barney Welch (Editor’s Note: the following article was written by Lt. Col. Kenneth W. Gruber, Education and Plans Officer for Detach ment 805 at Texas A&M. It is believed that the article contains timely and informative observa tions concerning the efforts of the Department of Defense to counter progress of possible ene my nations). By Lt. Col. Kenneth Gruber Release of previously frozen funds of $155,000,000 plus 875,- 000,000, from the 1961 budget has provided the United States Air Force with enough money to proceed with production on the B-70 aircraft, which may be our last manned bomber. First flight for the B-70 is scheduled for sometimes in 1962 and the proto type, including all the proposed weapons delivery and navigation equipment, is expected to take to the air in 1963. Some of the early models, as they prove them selves, could also be converted into operational bombers. The B-70 is a mach 3 manned bomber designed to fly 15 miles above the surface of the earth at about 2,000 mph. (Mach 1 is the speed of sound). Now, just what does this 2,000 mph speed mean in terms of time and distance? In a recent pamphlet, “Aerospace Talk I,” an Air Force project officer in the B-70 program ex plained it this way. He assumed that a B-70 bomb er and crew were on a tem porary duty mission in Eng land. So he prepared a flight plan for their return trip to their home base in California —specifically, March Air Force Base near Los Angeles. The flight plan called for a take off from Greenham Common Air Base outside of London at 7:30 in the morning. At that hour, the sun would be about 20 degrees above the horizon. After takeoff, the bomber climbed up to cruising altitude, which changes the sky picture. The horizon drops away and the sun appears to climb rapid ly almost to the zenith. But, here a strange thing happens. Relative to the aircraft, the sun stands still, and then be gins to set. If the bomber crew chose to look backward as they flew their great circle route, they could witness the amaz ing spectacle of the sun setting in the east. Four hours after takeoff their bomber touches down at March Air Force Base. The crew is debriefed, the men have a leisurely breakfast in the mess hall, and each man Social Calendar Job Interviews The following organizations will meet on campus: THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported, non profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op erated by students as a community newspaper and is under the supervision of the director of Student Publications at Texas A&M College. Membarg of the Student Publications Board are L. A. Duewall, director of Student Publications, chairman; Allen Schrader, School of Arts and Sciences; Willard I. Trnettner, School of Engineering; Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatehes credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter here in are also reserved. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M. is published in College Sta tion, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem ber through May, and onoe a week during summer school. Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office to College Station, Texas, under the Act of Con- Jress of March 8, 1870. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Assn. Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los An geles and San Francisco. News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the editorial office. Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. Mail subscriptions are $3.60 per semester; $6 per school year, $6.50 per full year. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA, College Station, Texas. BILL HICKLIN Joe Callicoatte. Bob Sloan, Alan Payne, Tommy Holbein — Jim Gibson, Bob Roberts — Larry Smith Bob Mitchell, Ronnie Bookman, Robert Denney, Gerry Brown - - — Johnny Herrin - — Rnssell Brown — EDITOR * Sports Editor News Editors Editorial Writers Assistant Sports Editor Staff Writers Photographers Sports Writers The following firms will hold job interviews for seniors in the Placement Office. k Mar. 22-23 ★ ★ ★ Convair Astronautics, for those majoring in aeronautical, electri cal or mechanical engineering and physics, chemistry or mathe-^ matics. ★ ★ ★ The U.S. Soil Conservation Service, for those majoring in! range management. Tonight The Associated General Con tractors will meet in the Me morial Student Center at 7:30 p.m. The P.E. Wives Club will meet in the P.E. Library in G. Rollie White Coliseum at 8 p.m. Tues day. WANT ADS Get a flying start on Continental! WASHINGTON NEW ORLEANS CHICAGO NEW YORK Convenient connections at Dallas and Houston with faat 4-engine non-stops east. For reservations, call/our Tsawd Agent or Continental at VI 6-4789. CONTIKEMTAL AIRLINES goes home in ample time to en joy the second sunrise of that day with his family. The time of the flight would be four hours; the time of the sun’s transit would be eight . . It will be years before all of the planned capabilities for the B-70 become accomplished facts. However, since the days in the early fifties when the F-80, F-84, and F-86 jet fighters were streak ing across Korea at speeds of 500-670 mph, there have been many major achievements. Here are only a few of the major ac complishments that stand as a tribute to the planning of ten years ago. 1. The recent closed course* 1,216 mph speed record estab lished by the F-105 Thunderchief. 2. The straight course 1,525 mph speed record recently estab lished by the F-106 Delta Dart. 3. The speed record exceeding 2,100 mph by the late Capt. Mil- burn Apt in the X-2. 4. On 15 November 1960, Scott Crossfield with the X-15 held to half throttle, flew to nearly 80,- 000 feet and close to 2,000 mph. 5. The altitude record of 103,- 395 feet established by the F-104 Starfighter. (Man’s blood will boil at altitudes above 63,000 feet unless he is in a pressurized cab in or specially designed pressure suit.) 6. The altitude record of 126,- 200 feet established by the late Capt. Iven Kincheloe in the X-2. 7. The altitude record of 136,- 500 feet recently set by Maj. Rob ert M. White in the X-15. (Nine ty-nine percent of the earth’s at mosphere is below 100,000 feet.) 8. On 19 September 1960, the Atlas Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) traveled 9,000 miles from Cape Canaveral and hit within two miles of a de signed target point. 9. This past September the satellites Discoverer XIV and Discoverer XIII ejected their cap sules after orbiting the earth. So accurate was the timing of the ejections that both capsules were recovered—one in mid-air. Alaska and a capsule was eject ed from Discoverer XVII. The capsule was recovered in mid-air near Hawaii. (On 11 December 1960 the capsule from the Dis coverer XVIII was caught in mid air.) The inventory of our weapon systems will include manned bombers for several more years. There will be years when we have a “blend” of bombers and mis siles. Compared to the Titan ICBM (see below), the B-70 may seem exceedingly low and slow. However, during this period the bombers and missiles will comple ment rather than compete with one another. On a recent flight the Titan reached an altitude of over 190 miles and speeds of about 17,000 mph. On re-entry into the atmos phere, it was traveling over 15,- 000 mph. The heat generated raised the temperature of the nose cone to 12,000 degrees. The hose cone has a recently devel oped material to protect it. It is an ablation type nose cone. A thin layer of the surface melts and gradually vaporizes. This absorbs heat energy and makes it possible for the nose cone to stay intact. The nose cone of this Titan was recovered 6,000 miles or more from the launching point. Time for the distance was about 32 minutes. Yet, in terms of fu ture missiles, the Titan may soon be obsolete. 10. The Air Force has placed a Midas test sateillite in orbit with a payload of 3,600 pounds. The almost circular orbit varies less than 30 miles in altitude from 322 miles at apogee to 292.5 miles at perigee. 11. On 14 November 1960, Dis coverer XVII had been in orbit nearly two days. On the 31st or bital pass, signals were sent from If one were to think in terms of World War II bomber speeds (approximately 200 mph) and re member the strategic location of Italy and the buffer (warning) zone the peninsula helped pro vide, it is incredible how wea pons systems such as the Titan have changed the strategic and tactical importance of every lo cation on this earth. For instance, Italy is approximately 700 miles in length. At speeds of 200 mph, Italy provided a three and one- half hour buffer zone, running from the Alps to the tip of the boot. This was important in World War II. But, now let us see what missiles with the capa bility of the Titan have done to Italy as a strategic location in terms of time and distance. The Titan begins its entry into the atmosphere approximately 500 miles from the point of impact. At this phase of flight it is trav eling over 15,000 mph, and would cover Italy’s 700 miles in the in credibly short time of three min utes. When considering speeds of 15,000 mph, Italy would have raiif— ■Hiiav ■ili A man with Alopecia UEiiversalis* doesn’t need tills deodorant He could use a woman’s roll-on with impunity. Mennen Spray was made for the man who wants a deodorant he knows will get through to the skin .. . where perspiration starts. Mennen Spray Deodorant does just that. It gets through to the skin. And it works. All day. More men use Mennen Spray than any other deodorant. Have you tried it yet? 640 and $1.00 plus tax •Comclete lack of body hair, including that of the scalp, legs, armpits, face, etc. to be over 52,000 miles in length, or more than two times the dis tance around the earth at the equator, to provide the three and one-half hour buffer zone. (Dis tance around the earth at the equator is 24,902 miles.) Throughout recorded history, man’s rate of progress has varied with the speed at which he could travel or communicate. In terms of time, the size of the earth is relative to speed at which man made vehicles or communication signals travel. In terms of time, the speed of the missile has shrunk Kansas from a 1 by 2 hour (WW II) state to a less than a 1 by 2 minute state today, (Two hundred mph as compared to 15,000 mph or 1-75.) In terms of WW II speed, “missile speed" shrinks the earth from a sphere with a polar diameter of 7,900 miles to one with a diameter of about 105 miles. How can one visualize the “missile speed” size of today’s earth? Here is one way. Think of today’s earth as a sphere located within a space represented by the distance from Houston to Hearne—inhabited by Texans one inch tall. Moscow is less than 6,000 miles from Houston. Houston — 30 minutes from Moscow. OnCampt!! with Maxfihulinan (Author of “I Was a Teen-age Dwarf”, ‘‘The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis”, etc.) HAPPINESS CAN’T BUY MONEY With tuitjon costs spiralling ever upward, more and more under* graduates are investigating the student loan plan. If you are one who is considering the “Learn Now, Pay Later” system,you would do well first to study the case of Leonid Sigafoos. Leonid, the son of an upholsterer in Straitened Circum* stances, Idaho, had his heart set on going to college, but his father, alas, could not afford to send him. Leonid applied for a Regents Scholarship, but his reading speed, alas, was not very rapid—two words an hour—and before he could finish the first page of his test the Regents had closed their brief cases crossly and gone home. Leonid then applied for an athletic scholarship, but he had, alas, only a single athletic skill- balancing a stick on his chin—and this, alas, aroused only passing enthusiasm among the coaches., - ^ Y And then, huzzah, Leonid learned of the studeat loaa plan; he could borrow money for his tuition and repay it in easy monthly installments after he left school! Happily Leonid enrolled in the Southeastern Idaho College of Woodpulp and Restoration Drama and happily began a college career that grew more happy year by year. Indeed, it became altogether ecstatic in his senior year because Leonid met a coed named Salina T. Nem with hair like beaten gold and eyes like two squirts of Lake Louise. Love gripped them in its big moist palm and they were betrothed on the Eve of St. Agnes. Happily they made plans to be married the day after com* mencement—plans, alas, that never were to come to fruition because Leonid, alas, learned that Salina, like himself, was in college on a student loan, which meant that he had not only to repay his own loan when he left school but also Salina’s, and the job, alas, that was waiting for Leonid after graduation at the Boise Raccoon Works simply did not pay enough, alas, to cover both their loans, plus rent and food and clothing. Sick at heart, Leonid and Salina sat down and lit Marlboro Cigarettes and tried to find an answer to their problem—and, sure enough, they did! I do not know whether or not Marlboro Cigarettes helped them find an answer; all I know is that Marlboros taste good and look good, and when things close in and a feller needs a friend and the -world is black as the pit from pole to pole, it is a heap of comfort and satisfaction to be sure that Marlboros will always provide the same unflagging pleas ure, the same unstinting quality, in all times and climes and conditions. That’s all I know. Leonid and Salina, I say, did find an answer—a very simple one. If their student loans did not come due until they left school, why, then they just wouldn’t leave school! So after receiving their bachelor degrees, they re-enrolled and took masters degrees. After that they took doctors degrees, loads and loads of them, until today Leonid and Salina, both aged 78, both still in school, hold doctorates in Philosophy, Humane Letters, Jurisprudence, Veterinary Medicine, Civil Engineering, Op tometry, and Dewey Decimals. Their student loans, as of last January 1, amounted to a combined total of eighteen million dollars, a sum which they probably would have found great difficulty in repaying had not the Department of the Interior recently declared them a National Park. © 1961 Max Shulmaa You don’t need a student loan—-just a little loose change— to grab yourself a new kind of smoking pleasure fra:' makers of Marlboro—the unaltered king-size Philip Morris Commander. Welcome aboard! PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz 0. F Apr-1 inefor ! lent pub! ihool y< if Stude nail, ma lerday. The s ire: edi ;or The fheEng A&)1 Ke Kstern Ike Agg The i hewed b . Hoard ai rill be lour deg Presiden ipproval Minim ditorshi Applic junior oi They tonic a: Each itrated a ud abili Applic Cue LM. tfElectr imnced ID. Chi (hand t inner o ftrence I peers, Ipr. 17- Haupt Smith is (I Bible, »i th( pity . |ife an: land of Dr. W raduati tome ac due I