The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 27, 1961, Image 1

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COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1961
Number £7^
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President Contributes
President Earl Rudder gives check to Johnny Ant his
Civilians Set Bonfire Chores
)
Making: definite plans fpr ci-
lilian participation in this year’s
[Wire, the Civilian Bonfire Com
mittee met Wednesday niprht in
tie lounge of Puryear Hall with
five persons present.
Gene Anderson, civilian coord-
ktor to the Bonfire Committee,
laid an all-out effort will be made
to get full participation by civil
ian students this yeaar.
The committee is set up in the
Mowing manner: Homero Can-
will be in charge of the stack-
area; Bob Richardson will di-
itct civilian activities in the cut-
ing area; and other members of
the committee, including Bryan
McCool and Chris Galendo, will
also conduct activity in the build
ing effort.
“This will be carried out in nor
mal bonfire procedure, and we
want to stress that it is essential
that the civilians come out to work
the Saturday of Bonfire—all stu
dents not attending the game are
requested to come out and work.
Since the Corps Boys are going
to be gone, it will be our job,”
said Anderson.
Cadets will be on a Corps trip
to Houston, where the Aggies
play the Rice Owls on Nov. 18,
and no members of the Corps will
be able to begin work until Sun
day.
Civilians will be asked to guard
the center pole Friday and Satur
day nights; any civilian interested
in working should contact his
dorm president. Also, he should
tell his dorm president what ex
perience he has had on the bon
fire. By Friday, Nov. 3, the list
should be complete, and meetings
will be called on the dorm level for
all interested students.
The men will then elect their
i own crew leader from each dorm.
This will give two weeks to
| organize.
TRENDS IN GOVERNMENT’
SCONA Slate Shaping;
Dec. 6 Opening Nears
Work on the Seventh Student
(onference on National Affairs
let Dec. 6-9 in the Memorial Stu-
ient Center is progressing right
in schedule in most areas, ac-
tording to David Spencer, Con-
lerence chairman.
Senator Hubert Humphries, lib-
iral democrat, has been confirmed
)i one of two keynote speakers
selected in accordance with the
(onference program topic, “Trends
iiGovernment: Liberals and Con-
servatives.”
William Miller, chairman of the
Republican National Party, has
been extended an invitation to be
conservative keynote speaker, but
no answer has yet been received,
according to Spencer.
Other prominent figures in lib
eral and conservative government
are Gus Tyler and Laurie Battle,
who will form a two-man panel
to be presented during the three-
day meet.
WTl
est
SCONA VII Shaping Up
David Spencer, chairman of the Seventh Student Con
ference on National Affairs, discusses current devel
opments in preparing for the four-day meet with Tommy
Holbein, publicity chairman. The conference will be held
December 6-9.
Tyler, a liberal, is director of
education for the Ladies’ Garment
Union, and a representative of
the AFL-CIO. Battle is former
congressman from Alabama, and
will take the conservative side
of government.
On Dec. 8, third day of the con
ference, a five-man panel moder
ated by Congressman Olin E.
Teague, democrat from Bryan,
will present a discussion of gov
ernmental issues.
Other members of the panel will
be Congressman B. F. Sisk, lib
eral democrat; Congressman Wil
liam Jennings Bryan Dorn, con
servative democrat; Congressman
T. B. Curtis, conservative repub
lican, and a foui’th liberal repub
lican as yet undetermined.
The conference is conducted on
a seminar basis, with delegates
from 80 colleges and universities
in Canada, United States and Mex
ico participating. In special ses
sions, the delegates form into
roundtable groups to discuss the
five divisions of the program topic.
These sections are: The role
of the federal government in
labor-management relations; pro
viding general welfare and social
security; international affairs;
protection of civil • rights, and in
education.
Outstanding men selected as
roundtable chairmen include Dr.
Rocco Paone of the United States
Naval Academy; Capt. Jack E.
Freeman of the Air Force Acad
emy; Maj. George Tilson of the
United States Military Academy,
and Dean Alvin Price of the
School of Veterinary Medicine at
A&M.
Mario Romero Lopetegui, for
mer mayor of Acapulco and for
mer Mexican congressman, pres
ently of Mexico City, will also be
a roundtable chairman, with Fred
Pool, manager of the East Texas
Chamber of Commerce.
Jenkin Lloyd Jones, president
of the American Society of News
paper Editors, has been invited
to be roundup speaker for SCONA
VII. The outstanding editor and
publisher was recently on the
A&M campus to address the first
meeting of the Century Council.
WeekendHighlighted
By Ag-Baylor Feud
STARTS TOMORROW
Campus Chest
Plans Revealed
The annual Campus Chest drive,
sponsored by the Student* Senate,
will get underway tomorrow in
Kyle Field with collection tubs
placed throughout the stadium for
contributions.
Official collections from the stu
dent body will begin Monday, Oct.
30, under the supervision of the
dorm presidents and unit com
manders. This year, plaques will
V. A. Patients
Guests At
or Game
BayL
More than 35 patients and dom-
icilian members of the Veterans
Administration Center at Temple
will be guests of the College and
the Athletic Department at the
A&M-Baylor football game tomor
row*.
The patients, accompanied by
nurses and Mrs. Margaret Wade,
trip supervisor, will arrive shortly
before noon and have lunch in
Duncan Dining Hall. They will
be met by P. L. “Pinkie” Downs
Jr., official greeter for the Col
lege, in charge of local arrange
ments.
The guests wall be seated along
the cinder path in box seats on
the west side of Kyle Field. Pro
grams and refreshments will be
served the guests and following
the game they w r ill have their
evening meal at Duncan Dining
Hall.
There are 1,200 patients at the
Center at present. “This will be
the sixteenth time the group has
been our guests,” Downs said.
Restricted Autos
Pose Problem To
Traffic Officers
Parking of restricted automo
biles on pi’ivate propeity by A&M
students has become one of the
major problems of the police de
partment, College Station Chief of
Police Lee Norwood said today.
“While cooperation of the stu
dent has been very good in many
matters,” Norwood said, “Some
students whose cars have been re
stricted are not very particular
where they leave them parked off
the campus.”
Citing a recent example, Nor
wood said a student parked his
automobile in an area which in
terfered with the unloading of a
truck. He added that blocking of
driveways and entrances was not
uncommon.
Clenn E. Bolton, patrolman sup
ervisor for Campus Security, said
that the students themselves are
the determining factor in the re
striction of automobiles. Each stu
dent who receives a ticket has the
option of a 30-day restriction or a
fine, if his car has been properly
registered.
If the vehicle has not been reg
istered or the student receives
five tickets, the restriction is auto
matic. Students whose cars are re
stricted are not required to take
them homo but must leave them
off the campus unless otherwise
directed.
be presented to all units and
dorms wdth 100 per* cent contribu
tions, and a special bronze plaque
will be given the group with the
highest contributions per man.
In existence nine years, the
Campus Fund has been handled
through the Student Semite Wel
fare Committee, this year under
the chairmanship of Johnny An-
this. This yeqr’s goal is $1 “from
an Aggie, for an Aggie.’
Consistent feature of the fund
has been the Aggie Chest, v'hich
is. used to assist fellow students
who suffer a tragedy of some sort,
such as an accident, fire or neces
sary operation.
Special effort is made to in
vestigate each case to assure the
fact that the offer is needed and
will not be offensive. During its
nine years of history, the Campus
Chest has brought much-needed
help to many hundreds of Aggies
who would not have received it
otherwise.
Other agencies besides the
chest benefit, also; 10 per cent
goes to the Brazos County Tuber
culosis Association; a second 10
per cent to the College Station
Community Chest, and a third 10
per cent to the March of Dimes.
The remaining 70 per cent is re
tained in the Aggie Chest.
Connally Possible
Governor Hopeful
DALLAS <£»> — Navy Secy.
John Connally of Fort Worth is
expected to announce for governor
about Dec. 1, the Dallas Times
Herald said Thursday. The news
paper quoted “a Dallas source
close to cabinet officer.”
The account said Connally would
run, regardless of whether Gov.
Price Daniel seeks a fourth term.
Ray Anthony
Starts Activities
By TOMMY HOLBEIN
Battalion Managing Editor
With an event-packed schedule, the A&M-Baylor week
end will officially begin this evening in G. Rollie White Coli
seum featuring “Ray Anthony and the Bookends”, famous
Hollywood and Las Vegas night club music and comedy act.
The show will begin at 8 p. m., and individual tickets
will go on sale at 7 in the ticket booth of G. Rollie White
for $2.50 each.
Following Town Hall, the Memorial Student Center
Dance Committee will sponsor a “stereo dance" in the MSC
Lower Level from 9:80 to 11:30, preceding Midnight Yell
Practice.
At 11 :30, the traditional home game Midnight Yell
Practice will be held in Kyle"f"
Field, according to Jim Davis,
head yell leader.
Next official event on tab
will be drill Saturday morning
for all members of the Corps of
Cadets in their assigned areas.
Saturday afternoon, the Aggies
meet the Bears in the 58th en
counter of rivalry between the two
schools. The first game was played
in 1896, with an Aggie win, 33-0.
Following the game, party-goers
will have their choice of two
dances, one in the Memorial Stu
dent Center from 9-12 p.m. in the
Ballroom, featuring the Aggieland
Orchestra under the direction of
Bob Boone. The dance is free, and
all are invited to attend.
A second choice is the “Tomb
Room,” sponsored by all Fourth
Year Architect Design majors, to
be held in Fellowship Hall on
Tabor Road starting at nine Fri
day night. The annual Halloween
party will feature the Joe Daniels
Combo, at a cost of $3, stag or
drag.
For those still seeking entertain
ment Sunday, the Memorial Stu
dent Center will kick off its Sun
day Celebrity Series that after
noon with a program of Latin
American music in the Ballroom.
The music will be provided by
a group of A&M students known
as the “Hot Peppers,” starting at
2:30 p.m. Coffee, tea and soft
drinks will be served.
Health Service
Says Fallout
Needs Watch
WASHINGTON (A 5 ) — Fallout
Iqvels from Soviet nuclear explo
sions thus far do not warrant un
due public concern or drastic ac
tion, a U.S. Public Health Service
statement said yesterday.
However, the statement added
that present levels “do warrant
continuous, intensive surveillance
by federal, state and local gov
ernments and consideration of
protective measures which might
be taken if they should be found
necessary.”
The statement was issued as
the health service began an ex
traordinary two-day meeting to
consider what steps might be ta
ken on all levels of government
if fallout hazards become acute.
Attending the closed-door meet
ing were about 100 federal, state
and local health officers repre
senting every state. The health
service said special problems that
may develop in particular areas
were receiving attention.
As the meeting convened, U.S.
Weather Bureau officials said the
cloud of initial fallout radiation
thrown off by the Soviet Union’s
superbomb blast of Monday wgs
rolling steadily across the North
Pacific.
The main part of the cloud was
(See FALLOUT On Page 4)
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