The Battalion Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1962 Number 86 MARION WALTON Aggie Senior Named Fellow Marion M. Walton Jr., ’62, from New Iberia, La., has been named a winner of the highly coveted Woodrow Wilson National Fellow ship. He is Corps Scholastics of ficer. Walton, majoring in English, was among 1,058 winners this year representing 46 states, eight prov inces in Canada, Puerto Rico, Pan ama and the Canal Zone. Winners were selected by 15 regional com mittees from 9,975 candidates nominated from 965 colleges and universities. He was one of 54 winners in Rejnon 12, made up of Texas and Louisiana. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion M. Walton of New Iberia. Two other A&M students re ceived honorable mention honors as nominees. They were John R. Stough Jr. or Arlington, Va., an other English major, and James R. Sullivan of Fort Worth, major ing in physics. Pr. John P. Abbott, professor of English and campus represen tative of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, said the purpose of the fellowships is to provide funds and incentive for graduate study for young men and women of high academic standing who are inter ested in college and university teaching careers. He said there are now 645 for mer Fellow winners teaching at 293 institutions of higher learning and another 641 expecting to com plete their doctorates by fall. Walton says he plans to work toward his master of arts degree and doctorate and go into college teaching. Abbott said awards this year culminate the first five year pro gram of the Woodrow Wilson Fel- '.owship Foundation, made possible by a Ford Foundation grant of $24.5 million in 1957. The fellowships have now en abled about 5,000 college graduates to begin careers leading to teach ing. Of those previously appoint ed, 80 per cent are either teaching at the college or secondary level or are continuing in graduate school. Each fellowship award covers a full year’s tuition and fees at a graduate school of the fellow’s choice and a living allowance of $1,560, Abbott said. He said that a candidate accept ing a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship assumes a moral obligation to com plete at least one year of graduate studies and to give serious thought to a career in college teaching. The fellowships may be held at any graduate school in the United States or Canada admitting the Fellows. Peace Corps Meet Set For Dallas On March 23-24 A student regional Peace Corps Conference on the Southern Metho dist University campus will be held in Dallas, March 23-24. Stu dent senates of SMU and Bishop College are joint sponsors. The con ference will begin with a 5 p.m. registration March 23. Leading Peace Corps officials from Washington will direct the conference. An optional feature will be a final $2.75 a plate din ner and address by Sargent Shriv el*. director of the Peace Corps. Delegates may arrange for their own housing or stay at the Statler- Hilton Hotel on student rates of $3.50 per night with three or four per room. Registration fee for the conference will be $5. Students desiring to attend the conference who have not already sent in their fee and registration request should see Daniel Russell, Room 316-17, Agriculture Building, no later than Thursday. Wire Wrap- By The Associated Press World News GENEVA—American and British officials, anxious to present a united face, declared themselves in accord Tuesday night on proposals to the Russians, including President Ken nedy’s concept of safeguards against secret preparations for nuclear test explosions. A public record of agreement was given to newsmen fol lowing an afternoon discussion between Secretary of state Dean Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Lord Home on the eve of the 17-nation disarmament conference. U. S. News WASHINGTON—The annual foreign aid battle in Con gress was launched Tuesday when President Kennedy formal ly asked for $4,878,500,000 to help other nations combat threats of communism, chaos and tyranny. Kennedy insisted that the total cannot be cut “if the partnership on which we are now embarked is to demonstrate the advances in human well-being which flow from economic development joined with political liberty.” 'At 'At ^ WASHINGTON—The House Foreign Affairs Committee today approved a bill to expand the Peace Corps to 10,000 volunteers at home and abroad. The measure authorizes an appropriation of $63,750,000 —the full amount asked by the administration—to continue the buildup of the corps in the year starting July 1. Texas News HOUSTON—A former state Republican chairman said Tuesday he may challenge the legality of the May 5 Demo cratic Primary in Harris County. Thad Hutcheson, Houston attorney, said the county Democratic executive committee failed to meet Monday as prescribed by article 13.34 of the Texas Election Code. The article specifies that county executive committees meet on the second Monday of March to determine the hour and places for the precinct conventions of May 12. Ac 'fc Ac CONWAY, Tex.—A young girl hitchhiker, befriended by the Henry A. Henderson family of Conway, was missing Tuesday night with the Henderson’s 3-year-old daughter, Sharon. Carson County Sheriff John Nunn said Henderson told him he left home about 3:45 p. m. and left the 19-year-old hitchhiker, known only as Carol, to babysit with the little girl. He said he returned about 5:15 p. m. and found a note saying, “We are going to New York.” Marion Walton . . . Wilson Fellow Commission Cites Profs After Study Six faculty members have been cited for their service to the U.S. Study Commission-Texas, President Earl Rudder announced. They are Morris E. Bloodworth, professor of soil physics; C. A. Bonnen, professor of agricultural economics; Curtis L. Godfrey, as sociate professor of agronomy; Price Hobgood, professor and head of the Department of Agricultural Engineering; S. A. Lynch, profes sor and head of the Department of Geology and Geophysics; and J. H. Sorrels, professor of civil engi neering. The U. S. Study Commission- Texas made a recent survey of river basins in Texas to determine land and water resources. The A&M men provided technical in formation for the study. Charles D. Curran of Houston, executive director of the Commis sion, said certificates have been sent to the professors “in recogni tion of their professional assist ance to this commission and in appreciation of their notable con tribution.” Plant Breeding Topic of Talk By Scientist “Use of Ionizing Rays in Plant Breeding” is the subject of a Uni versity of Tennessee scientist who will lecture here tonight. The speaker is Dr. Thomas S. Osborne, associate professor of agronomy, lecturer in botany and in charge of plant genetics re search at the University of Ten nessee-Atomic Energy Commission Agricultural Research Laboratory at Oak Ridge. His talk is at 8 p.m. in the Bio logical Sciences Lecture Room. The public is invited. Dr. Wayne C. Hall, dean of graduate studies said Osborne’s research interests center around use of induced mutations in plant breeding and factors controlling and modifying the response of dormant seeds to ionizing radia tion. He has published several sci entific papers has recently com pleted a popular monograph for the AEG titled “Atomic Enei’gy in Agricultural Research” and is preparing a high school experi mental manual “Experiments with Radiation on Seeds.” Osborne is a native of North west Arkansas and studied at the University of Arkansas, Oklahoma State University and Washington State University. His doctoral re search at Washington State (1950- 53) was supported by an AEG Predoctoral Fellowship and involv ed radiation-induced chormosome translocations in intergeneric hy brids of the grass family He has been a staff member of the University of Tennessee since 1953. Walkers To Speak In Bryan Thursday Gen. Edwin A. Walker, demo cratic candidate for the governor’s nomination, will speak Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Stephen F. Aus tin auditorium in Bryan. Walker is touring the state in an active campagin prior to the election. Army Magazine Hints At Changes In ROTC : f ON GUION STAGE Players Continue Spring Rehearsals Rehearsing three nights a week, the Aggie Players have been pre paring their spring production, “Tiger At The Gates,” to be played on the Guion Hall stage April 25-31. The campus thespian organiza tion, under the leadership of C. K. Esten, director, and Vic Wiening, assistant director, has scheduled the play as their major produc tion for the semester. To be performed in two acts, “Tiger At The Gates” has an anci ent Grecian setting, and its gen eral theme deals with the natur al tendency of the “old men” — philosophers poets and statesmen — to glorify war, and the contempt for war held by the young men who must fight and be killed. Written by the French play wright, Jean Giraudoux, the play is a farce on war; it was first viewed before an alien Nazi audi ence in Paris during the World War II German occupation of the city. It was fully enjoyed by the Germans, even though it subtly “slapped them in the face.” Costumes for the Guion Hall pro duction will be traditional Greek, dress, simplified, with large use of color associated with charact ers. Elaborate preparations have al ready gone into the hasic prelimin aries of preparing the costumes. Many of the famous names of Gjreek literature can he found in the play, for it is the story of turmoil between the Greeks and the Trojans. The setting will be elaborate replicas of Greek ar chitecture, and the players will act on several levels constructed on stage. Much research has gone into de signing the sets that they might accurately portray the style of construction characteristics of that era. Members of the cast will in clude Dan Malcolm as Troilus; Mary Holbein as Helen; Reige Lundergan as Hecuba; David Lee as Demekos; David Jones as Pri am; David White as Paris; Bob Hipp as Hector; Ester Hord as Cassandra, and Dotty Ashworth as Andromache. Others are Mike Lutich as 01- pides; Niki Hagler as a topman; Richard Metz as Ulysses; Don Mc- Gown as Ajax; Charles Taite as Busiris; Larry Walker as Abneos; and Mike Gay as the mathematic ian. Assistant to the director for the production will be Sharon Satter- white; on lights and sound will be Charles Hearn and Corky Couvil- lon; Set design, Joseph Donaldson, Brit Jones, Bill Martin and Charles Hearn; set crew is under the direction of Jan Jones; Costumes are being handled by Ruth Sim mons and Jane Eisner; publicity directors are Tommy Holbein and Mary Ann Franklin. ‘Clean’ Wife Wins Verdict In Divorce LONDON (A 3 ) — A judge refus ed Tuesday to break up a marri age in which the husband claim ed his wife was so clean she wiped the cat’s paws every time it entered the house. Turning down William Harlock’s divorce petition, Justice Sir David Cairns said that although the wife had unusually high standards of cleanliness, such fastidiousness was not grounds for divorce. While she was nice to the cat, Harlock said, his wife thought he was dirty and even made him sleep in a separate room from hers. Engineering Faculty Members Hear Talk By Dr. A. A. Potter In an address to 65 members of A&M’s engineering faculty, Dr. A. A. Porter, dean emeritus of engineering, Purdue University, spoke yesterday on improving teaching methods in order to pro vide the nation with more highly trained and better educated engi neering graduates. Introduced by Dean of Engineer ing Fred J. Benson, Potter point ed out that the objective of high er education is to help the indivi dual prepare himself for the chal lenge of his work and to find his own individual happiness. Potter said, “Engineers must be useful, well-respected citizens, and they must be able to do and to create.” Potter explained that the prob lem existing today is preparing the engineer so that his job will not be “pulled out from under him in the prime of life.” He said that in the final analy sis it is up to the teachers to prepare engineering students for the work ahead. According to Potter, “Teaching is something of a science, but it is largely an art, and the great teacher loves his students more than his subject matter.” He said that every teacher is a researcher and his goal should be to do his teaching in a better way than it is being done now. A 1903 graudate of the Mass achusetts Institute of Technology, Potter began his career by work ing for General Electric Corp. In 1905 he joined the faculty of Kan sas State College as assistant pro fessor of mechanical engineering. He became dean of engineering in 1913. In 1920 he went to Purdue Uni versity, accepting the position of dean of engineering and director of the Engineering Experiment Sta tion, which he held until his re tirement in 1953. Potter is also past president of Bituminous Gobi Research, Inc., and has been president of the Pur due Research Foundation and the Purdue Aeronautics Corp. He has served in the capacity of consult ing power engineer and consult ant on engineering education for more than 40 years. NSF Grants A&M Soil, Water Funds The National Science Founda tion has approved a gi-ant of $7- 735 for the support of 10 under graduate research participants in the Soil and Water Section of the Department of Soil and Crop Sci ences Dr Morris E Bloodworth profes sor of soil physics said the grant is for the 1962-63 academic year. He said the purpose of the program, known as Undergradu ate Science Education, is to select outstanding students for graduate work on the basis of their re search performance Local Personnel Receive No Word By RONNIE FANN Battalion Staff Writer Lt; Col. T. A. Hitchkiss, operations officer in the Depart ment of Military Science and Tactics, said today that the Department of Military Science has received no official word on the proposed change to a two-year ROTC program for army cadets. A news story in the “Army Times,” unofficial but known to he based on authentic information, reveals that the Army has moved a long way toward acceptance of the Air Force plan for a two year ROTC program, and that implementing legislation is expected to go to Congress during the current session. Major changes under consideration involve cash support for the ROTC institutions, 4 increased payments for the students and the number of academic hours in the pro gram. However, the most controversial features is Army-Air Force competition on some cam puses. AF leaders propose to switch completely to a two-year plan, dropping the ROTC designation and renaming it the “Officers Educa tion Program.” This could repre sent a problem on some campuses if the Army is to retain its four- year program in any form. At present, AF and Army share the campus at 99 institutions including A&M. An Army plan recently under consideration would allow each ed ucational institution to decide whether it wanted to maintain a two-year or four-year ROTC pro gram. If the college should choose the four-year course, two-year programs of all services would be banned for that campus. Under the Army’s two-year plan, as developed so far, individuals ap plying for enrollment in advanced ROTC would receive four weeks of military instruction at summer camp before their junior year in college. This would not be re quired if the man completed the basic course at a four-year institu tion. Army authorities have pointed out that there are 593 junior col leges in the U. S. where the stu dents have no opportunity to re ceive basic ROTC. The summer camp plan would permit these stu dents to enter the pre-commission- Civilians Set Paris Theme For Weekend An “Evening In Paris” will be the theme of this year’s Civilian Weekend activities to be held Mar. 31. Beginning that evening will be a barbecue in the Grove to start at 5:30 p.m. with food being served until 6:15. Music will be provided by “The Hoasts.” In the event of bad weather, the barbecue will be held in the Animal Husbandry pavilion. Highlighting the activities will be a dance in Sbisa Dining Hall and the selection of the civilian sweetheart from 14 finalists. Ci vilian students will dance from 9-12 to the music of “The Hous tonians” from Sam Houston State Teachers College. Tickets for the barbecue will cost $1 for adults and 50 cents for children under 12. Admission to the dance is $2 “stag or drag.” Students who bought spring activ ity cards may exchange them fpr their tickets to either the bai’becue or the dance or both. Tickets may be bought or ex changed Mar. 19-29 from the re- pective housing area counselors. They will also be sold at the door. ing program when they transfer to degree-granting ROTC schools. Under the Army’s proposal, the pay of advanced ROTC students would be increased from $27. to $47 per month. Between the student’s junior and senior years, he would go to summer camp for eight weeks, instead of six weeks re quired in the pi’esent program and receive $111 per month, the same pay as cadets at the service academies. The longer summer camp would permit more of the military instruc tion to he given separately from the general academic program of the civilian institutions, a trend which has been pushed by lhe r civilian educators. Also, the insti tutions would receive $400 for each ROTC graduate. At present, the only federal sup port received by the institutions is through pay of the cadets and the ROTC instructors. With school populations rising rapidly, federal authorities believe some form of additional support will be needed to prevent the services from being gradually pushed off the campuses. DPS Might Release Test Results Soon AUSTIN (A 3 ) _ The Texas De partment of Public Safety said Tuesday the DPS will reveal no results of the lie detector tests taken by 22 Southwest Conference basketball officials, will be turned over to the South- The results, when available, west Conference, a DPS spokes man said. “We have given a total of 22 tests and the polygraph operators are busy tabulating the results,” the spokesman said. “We may be able to complete the job this week. As soon as we are through the results will be turned over to Southwest Conference officials. None of the results will be re vealed by the DPS before they are given to the Southwest Con ference.” The spokesman said the details of which SWC officials will re ceive the results and where the transaction will occur had not been worked out. Last week Abb Curtis, super visor of SWC referees, came to Austin with a group of referees. He said a total of 21 persons vol untarily submitted to questioning about their connections, if any, with basketball gambling. Later a man who originally was sched uled to take a similar test in Salt Lake City came to Austin and took the DPS test. The investigation by the DPS and the Federal Bureau of Investi gation became known after a New Yoi'k sports columnist, Gene Ros well, wrote that East Coast gam blers wouldn’t bet on results of Southwest Conference basketball games because of “hoop shenan igans.”