isass^rwr.*. ^sM-r;.' ‘.rar-H-sS r st ‘Baseball i through 1 Babe Ei ivs be aa than [,( The Battalion Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1962 Number 62 ! 1 c 5 D 0 :.35t , f § ‘lift ilJ :9fc 4fc Graduate Record Exams Approved Bad Outlook Given To Warehousemen A Commodity Credit Corporation official came up with a bleak outlook for warehousemen attend ing: the annual Grain Drying and Storage Short Course today. C. H. Moseley, director of the CCC at Dallas, told the estimated 150 persons attending the meeting that ‘‘hard times” probably lie a- head for those who make a busi ness of storing surplus grain. In come is down and it likely will go down even further. “Personally, I think things are going to get a lot worse before they get better,” he said. “Let there be no doubt about our (the CCC) determination to reduce sur pluses.” He described the farm front fu ture as bright. The government is showing progress in supply management and fair prices and is making an effort to regain re spectability for farmers. But there is some facing to do. “We’ve got to recognize that Last Issue The Battalion will publish only one issue next week, on Thurs day, Jan. 25. This edition of The Battalion will be the last of the Fall semester. The Battalion will publish one paper Thursday, Feb. 1 (during the semester break) and will resume regular publication Tuesday, Feb. 6. SBB Marines Will Commission Five Officers Saturday, immediately following the commencement exercises in G. Kollie White, the Marine Corps will commission five new officers in the Social Room of the MSC. To be commissioned are Her bert L. Currie, Wayne W. Frazior, John B. Hendricks, Fred H. Wrin kle and Harry F. Sharp Jr. The commissioning officer will be Lt. Col. C. H. Pritchett, assist ant director for personnel pro curement, Eighth Marine Corps Reserve and Recruitment District, New Orleans. Accompanying him will be Capt. F. L. Tolleson, the officer procure ment officer for this area, who will make this his farewell visit to the campus. Also with him will be the new OPO, Capt. J. H. Gary. American agriculture has the capa city to produce more of individ ual crops and more crops in general than the commercial market will take at reasonable prices over the next decade,” Moseley said. Reduced governmental expendi tures, he emphasized, rests square ly on development and acceptance of effective supply management programs in the more important crops. Improved farm income must come through effective supply management programs. “Improved incomes without ef fective supply management means unmanageable surpluses and un manageable budgetary expenditur es,” the speaker said. Moseley praised the results of the administration’s Feed Grain Program. The short course is sponsored each year by the Department of Agricultural Engineering and the Texas Agricultural Extension Ser vice in co-operation with the Tex as Grain and Feed Association. General program chairman was W. S. Allen, engineer with the Texas Agricultural Extension Service. Another speaker, Warren Le- Bourveau of Mathis, president of the Texas Grain and Feed Associ ation, cited the reduced storage volume facing warehousemen. He listed six alternatives for the grain storage industry if the situation worsens: 1 Forget about warehousing and buy and sell only at harvest time. 2 Buy grain for the warehouse man’s own account and hold for later resale. 3 Get into the feed manufac turing business. 4 Try to buy grain and hold for major buyers for later sale and export. 5 Develop livestock feeder ac counts. „ 6 Turn storage buildings into housing for some other industry. LeBourveau said that a sound country elevator system must be backed up with a sound grain agri culture. One is no good without the other. Robbers Get Buns Instead Of Bills LONDON (A*)—Payroll robbers snatched a bag Thursday from a 15-year-old apprentice entering a London factory. They thought they had the week’s wages. But what they got away with was a dozen currant buns des tined for the afternoon tea break. 379 Finish Classes, Graduate Tomorrow Three hundred seventy nine graduating seniors attended their last classes today and will receive degrees in graduation exercises to morrow in G. Rollie White Coli seum. Commencement ceremonies are scheduled at 10 a.m., with com missioning exercises to be held at 1:30 p.m. Two hundred seventy six under graduates will receive baccalaure ate degrees, while 103 other grad uates will be awarded advanced degrees. The School of Engineering tops the list of college schools with 116 candidates for baccalaureate de grees. The School of Arts and Sciences has 95 baccalaureate can didates and the School of Agri culture has 65. The graduate school has 75 can didates for masters degrees and 28 candidates for doctoral degrees. Dr. Carlyle Marney, minister of Myers Park Baptist Church in Student Wives To Help With Dimes Drive Wives of A&M students will con duct a Mothers March for the 1962 March of Dimes Tuesday, Jan. 23, in College View, Hensel and Pro ject House college apartments. The Battalion had previously report ed the drive had been held last Tuesday. ....Mrs. Joe Heilhecker, chairman of the special apartment solicita tion for the National Foundation, said student wives will seek dona tions from married students and faculty living in the college hous ing Tuesday from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. The regular Mothers’ March is scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 30. On that date all other homes in the Bryan-College Station area will be contacted. The apartment drive will be held a week early because of the A&M semester exam schedule. Mrs. Heilhecker said more vol unteers are needed to help con duct the drive. Student wives wishing to assist in raising funds for the March of Dimes are ask ed to call her at VI-6-7523. The National Foundation is con tinuing its campaign to eliminate polio and is concentrating research efforts to learn more about crip pling arthritis and child birth de fects. Campbell Soup Prexy Speaks Of Ag Economy Citing the hazards in the current | trend toward marketing orders in certain crops, Dr. W. B. Murphy, president of the Campbell Soup Company, said last night that the new plant Campbell is construct ing at Paris, Texas, “would not be a practical thing without direct contracts with farmers unhamper ed by artificial barriers.” Addressing faculty member and graduate students in the Biologi cal Sciences Lecture Room, Mur phy said the farmer, the consum er, and the processor “all fare better under an unfettered grower- processor contracting a r r a n g e- | ment.” He also pointed up the fallacy in thinking that over-efficiency in agriculture is responsible for pre sent crop surpluses should not be charged to research but rather to the many attempts that have been made to sidestep the inexorable laws of economics.” Murphy emphasized that artifi cial government controls are not needed by the grower, the pro- William B. Murphy . . . Campbell executive cessor or the consumer “when there is a sound contract between the grower and the processor, accept able to both parties, and when this contract is backed by superior ag gressive research work and skill ful crop service.” The speaker also reported that when Campbell completes its new plant in Paris, Texas, in 1964, a considerable number of high-quali ty ingredients -yvill be required and the company will be contracting for these with many Texas farmers. “Campbell Soup Company’s northern plants are already se curing large quantities of vege tables from the Rio Grande Valley at certain times of the year,” Mur phy said, “and are also conti’act- ing for okra and rice in Louisiana and large quantities of poultry in Arkansas.” In adition to the crop develop- (See MURPHY On Page 3) Charlotte, N. C., will deliver the commencement address. Commis sioning speaker will be Maj. Gen. Ralph Osborne, deputy command er of the U. S. 4th Army. Gen. Osborne will also present commissions to 51 A&M cadets. Chancellor M. T. Harrington and Eugene B. Darby of Pharr, chair man of the Board of Directors, will bring the opening greetings. The invocation will be given by Gary G. Lively, corps chaplain, and the benediction will be pro nounced by Jason M. Edgington, civilian student chaplain. Prior to the benediction Music Director Robert L. Boone will lead the graduates and the audience in the singing of The Spirit of Ag- gieland. Bryan’s Radio Station KORA will broadcast the commencement address tomorrow morning. Marney has lectured and preached at more than 50 colleges and universities. While he was at the First Baptist Church at Aus tin, he served as professor in homiletics and Christian ethics at the Austin Presbyterian Seminary. Extensive travels have taken him through Peru, Brazil, Bolivia, Argentina, Paraguay, Alaska, the Yukon Territory, Korea and Ja pan. Marney has served on the Study Committees of the’ World Council of Churches, the Theological Com- missiop of the Baptist World Al liance, and is presently serving on the Board of Trustees for the Christian Century Foundation and Mars Hill College. Gen. Osboi-ne has seen military duty in numerous areas through out the world. He served as the Army member of the United Na tions armistice delegation. At the conclusion of the armistice, he di rected the prisoner of war ex change program. In 1945, he was assigned to the European Theater of Operations for duty as assistant staff for per sonnel in the office of the theater commander, and later assigned to the Intelligence Division of the Supreme Headquarters Allied Ex peditionary Forces in Europe. He assumed duties as deputy commander of the 4th Army in June, 1961. Labs, Rooms Completed In Physics Wing Construction has been complet ed on the addition to the Physics Building and the addition has been accepted and approved by Texas A&M officials, according to W. H. Badgett, manager of the College Physical Plant. The addition to the Physics Building, which houses the Depart ment of Physics and the National Science Foundation, increases the gross area of the building from about 36,000 to about 59,000 square feet. The contract for the addi tion was let in the fall of 1960. The cost of construction was $380,000, with another $80,000 for new equipment for the wing. The new wing was built of fire-resist ant reinforced concrete to match the brick of the original building. The firm of Ingram and Harris of Beaumont was the designer and builder of the addition. Robert Boyce of the A&M System was the building inspector. Annual System Report For Released Chancellor M. T. Harrington’s annual report of the A&M System was released for distribution yes terday morning by the A&M Press. The annual report this year stresses further developments in the Nuclear Science Center and Data Processing Center, plus im provements in fields related to these two huge projects. In the foreword, Harrington states as his purpose, “Showing that, given the tools, these men (in the Nuclear Science Center and Data Processing Center) are achi eving results of value to the peo ple of Texas as well as to the scientific community not bounded by state lines.” The 40-page booklet indues arti- des on Prairie View A&M, Arling ton State College, Agricultural Ex- Ag Journalism Given 3 Grants Renewal of three scholarship grants for agriculture journalism students, with 50-pei’-cent increase in two, has been announced by the supporting firms. The three grants now total $1,900, Delbert McGuire, head of the Department of Jouralism, an nounced yesterday. The Clayton Fund of Houston, which in the past has offered two $500 scholarships, will increase them to $750 each for the 1962- 63 school year, according to W. L. Anderson, trustee of the fund. The third scholarship of $400 is offered by the Wildlife Manage ment Institute of Washington, D. C. periment Station, Tarleton State College, Agricultural Extension Service, Texas Forest Service, En gineering Experiment Station, Tex as Transportationn Institute, and Engineering Extension Service, as well as A&M. 2 Examinations Set For Seniors By ALAN PAYNE Battalion News Editor Initial steps were taken last night by the Student Senate to secure A&M’s participation in the Educational Testing Service’s Graduate Record Examination program. The Senate passed a four-point proposal tentatively placing A&M in the program. Dean of Instruction Dr. Wil liam Graff will now take the proposals to the college execu tive committee for final approval. The approved proposals were: 1. Aptitude tests will be given all graduating seniors, while advanced tests will be given seniors in the specific fields covered by the exams. Graduates in fields other than those covered in the advanced tests will take the tests only if their department heads de- 4 cide they should. The depart ment heads will also designate which tests the seniors will take. (Whether the present senior class will be able to take the exams is still not known.) 2. Results of the tests will not be placed on permanent record. 3. The test will be given free of charge this year, and in following years if possible. 4. The tests shall not be a pre requisite for graduation. The examination, which is now required for entrance to the A&M Graduate School, includes three tests. These are area tests, de signed to measure the breadth of knowledge and understanding in broad areas of the liberal arts; aptitude tests, which yield meas ures of over-all scholastic ability expected of college graduates; and advanced tests, which test the stu dents in their major fields of study. Area tests were never consid ered for A&M because, according to Graff, “We would have to give every student the same test twice —when he first arrives on campus and when he graduates—and this would not be very feasible.” Advanced tests are given in bi ology, chemistry, economics, edu cation, engineering, French, geol ogy. government, history, litera ture, mathematics, music, philos ophy, physics, psychology, schol astic philosophy, sociology, Span ish and speech. According to Graff, the main purpose of the exams, other than providing avenues for students en route to graduate school, will be in comparing test results over a period of years to determine if various, departments are either in creasing or lowering their aca demic standards. If the tests are approved by the college executive committee, sen iors will take the exams during (See EXAMS On Page 3) Graff Explains Examinations Dean of Instruction Dr. William Graff explains a point to Student Senate President Malcolm Hall during- last night’s Student Senate meeting concerning Graduate Record Exams. TJie Senate voted to accept A&M’s participation in the program. Graduating seniors will now take at least one and maybe two exams the spring before they graduate. (Photo by Ben Wolfe) Soviet Subs In Indonesia For Support JAKARTA, Indonesia CP> — In formed sources said Thursday four long-range Soviet submarines ai*- rived Monday to augment the In donesian navy in the conflict with the Dutch over West New Guinea. The first Dutch-Indonesian naval engagement was a surface clash on Monday. The four subs were described as long-range “W” class vessels of 1,030 tons displacement, carry ing 14 torpedoes each. Two of the same type were delivered by the Soviet Union to Indonesia in Aug ust 1959. Informants said the four new subs arrived in Jakarta’s heavily guarded Tandjung Periuk Harbor under escort of a Soviet mother ship from Vladivostok. The mother ship was expected to stay in Indonesian waters un til Indonesian navy personnel com pleted their training on the new craft. Indonesian personnel brought the first two submarines in 1959 from Vladivostok with a number of Russians aboard each. Published specifications show a “W” class sub has six torpedo tubes, two 57mm and two 25mm guns and calls for a crew of 60; it has a surface speed of 17 knots and an underwater speed of 15 knots. A cruiser Indonesia is to get from the Soviets under the $400 million arms purchase agreement signed last year is expected to be delivered about mid-1962. Indone sians are being trained at Sevasto pol in the Black Sea to man it. There are reports that Indonesia plans to urge the Soviet Union to supply air-to-air missile weap ons to match similarly equipped Dutch fighter aircraft based in West New Guinea. Marine Officer Loses Article WASHINGTON OP) _ The De fense Department and the Ma rine Corps have refused to release a Marine colonel’s article on the service’s history. A Defense Department spokes man said today the articles seemed to have the effect of charging a conspiracy existed among several former officials to kill off the Ma rine Corps. The spokesman said clearance was refused because the article appeared to impugn motives of former presidents Harry S. Tru man and Dwight D. Eisenhower, retired Army Gen. Omar Bradley, former Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson and the late Adm. For rest Sherman, once chief of naval operations. The incident comes to light vh’- tually on the eve of opening of a Senate inquiry into charges of muzzling of military officers by Pentagon officials. A Senate sub committee probe is scheduled to begin next week. The institute sent the article to the Pentagon on Sept. 15, the spokesman said.