The Battalion Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1961 Number 36 -T CVTTitvKj A > AREA New Handball Courts Planned For DeWare DANCE SET DEC. 2 Thanksgiving Deadline Nears For Mrs. A&M This map, drawn by Cartoonist Jim Earle to help Slouch and Squirt find the new bon fire cutting area may help you too. Head Yell Leader Jim Davis said the best way to reach the new area is follow the road be hind the stacking area (drill field behind Duncan Dining Hall) to the flashing yellow light at the intersection of the road with Highway 6. Turn right on the highway for New Cutting Area about three miles or until you see the Sin clair filling station on the left. Turn left at the station and go down that road for one mile. The entrance to the cutting area will be marked, Davis said. Juniors and seniors are urged to be in the cutting area as much as possible this week to start cutting wood, the yell leader said. Travel Group Approved; Seeks Active 9 Leaders Entries in the Mrs. Texas A&M Contest should be in by Thanks giving, according to Mrs. Jean Vaught, president of the Aggie Wives Council. The selection of Mrs. Texas A&M will be at the annual dance sponsored by the council. Set for Dec. 2 in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom, the dance will feature the music of the George Vincent Sextet from Sam Hous ton State College. Mrs. Vaught said any wife of a currently enrolled A&M student is eligible to compete in the con test. Any campus club or organ ization is allowed to sponsor a contestant. She added that hus bands would be able to sponsor their wives, also. The entry fee is $2. The winner of the contest wil’ receive a cup and a bouquet. The Bryan-College Station Chamber of Commerce is donating the cup and the Aggieland Flower Shop is giv ing the bouquet. The first runner-up will receive a $15 permanent from Lady Fair and the second runnei'-up will re- The recently approved “Aggie Travel Club” is hunting for lead- irs,' The Memorial Student Center Council okayed the organization Honday night with a basic pur- lose to broaden the education of 14M students by making avail- ible information as to summer em- jloyment with opportunities of travel, organized tours to Mexico, Canada, points inside the United States, and trips abroad. “We’ve got the approval, now we need some good, strong lead ers," said Mike Schneider, council president. “We would prefer to kave juniors and sophomores in order to keep some continuity in activities next year.” Appointments for interviews can be made through the Student Program Office of the MSC, said Schneider. Appointments should be made before the weekend. “There is already a great deal of interest in this sort of an ac tivity, so we should be in good shape once w r e get about eight or nine sharp men to pilot opera tions,” he continued. Schneider said the name “Aggie Travel Club” is not official yet, but was pulled out of the air at a council meeting. To operate as a part of the MSC Dii’ectorate, the “Aggie Travel Club” would be on equal footing with the MSC’s Radio Committee, Camera Committee, Bowling Com mittee, etc. Monday night the council with held appropriating $200 to kick off the club’s initial expenses of Economist Says Collegians Should Be Paid By Schools KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A University of Chicago economist suggested yesterday that students should be paid to go to college. Professor H. W. Schultz said that such a practice would be one way of ending the waste of students’ lime and bringing about basic re forms in higher education. Schultz told the American Asso- oiation of Land Grant Colleges and State Universities seriously under estimate the value of the time stu- ients spend at college. "How else,” he asked, “can one explain the wastage of the time of the students?” In 1956, Schultz said, the total school cost of higher education in the United States was $3.5 billion. The total earnings foregone by college and university students that year were $5.8 billion. “But colleges go merrily on,” he said, “treating the time of stu dents as if they were a free re source. What is the remedy?” “Instead of rationing admissions and not economizing on the time of students, one way would be to fecruit and pay each student the earnings he will forego while at tending college. “I venture such a procedure, impractical as it may appear, would bring about basic reforms in the use of school facilities— libraries, laboratories and class rooms—in the use of faculty time, and above all a reform in curri cula.” Lawrence D. Haskew, vice chancellor of the University of Texas asked the association for “just 10 institutions in this coun- try which will invest in the search for better education one-half the money and energy they invest in the search for better pigs and cows.” Haskew said, “One of the things America needs most is a demon stration of what would happen if one public university of high cali ber really committed itself to teacher education for one decade.” organization, but indicated that needed funds would be given as the leaders were selected and the organization went into operation. Schneider said that the goals for this year would be the gather ing and releasing of information on summer jobs where the stu dents would also benefit from as sociating w r ith different people and traveling to new and different places. Schneider pointed out that many resort areas hire college students during the summers. Another aim of the club will be the organization of guided tours both in the United States and in foreign, countries. Robert Melcher, staff advisor to foreign students on. campus, told an informal organizational meeting last week that there are many foreign students that strike out on their own during Christ mas and mid-term holidays to see the United States. He said that a tour of our own country for foreign students would be received very well by visitors and new comers to America. Schneider said he felt the “Ag gie Travel Club” was definitely needed here, due to the large num ber of students that are born in Texas, reared in Texas, go to school in Texas, live their lives in Texas and die in Texas without seeing much of America, much less other countries. In discussing the forming of such an organization, Schneider met with students and staff, as well as travel agency representa tives in sessions last week. Appeals Court Orders Judge Briggs To Stop Stickney’s Execution Stays AUSTIN