■ rzZ&'k.- HUO )] Che Battalion More Parking Space Eyed.., See Pa«fe 3 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1962 Number 138 Varsity Team Introduced Head Coach Hank Foldberg 1 introduces the monies in G. Rollie White Coliseum Monday Season’s varsity football team to a roaring night, rowd during the All College Night cere- II Wire Review p T £4! Mi A By the Associated Press WORLD NEWS JOTTED NATIONS, N.Y.—Am- isador Adlai E. Stevenson, chief . delegate to the United Na- s, will deliver his country’s icy speech to the U.N. G'eneral sembly Thursday, a U.S. 'kesman said Monday, t is the first time that the manent head of the U.S. dele- ion has been selected to deliv- the policy address. Usually the retary of State or one of his uties or the President gives address. he spokesman had no comment ier than to say Stevenson had 'n picked by President Kennedy Secretary of State Dean Rusk the speech. 'k'A'k [COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Fiet astronaut Yuri A. Gaga- In, who traveled at 17,500 m.p.h. the world’s first astronaut, fes fast travel on earth as f-ll. During a recent visit here got into an American sports ' |r and raced at 80 m.p.h. in a |ur of the provinces. ★★★ U. S. NEWS Washington — The first nu- ar reactor in the government’s lap 8 program” — a potential irce of power for interplanetary ice travel -— was operated Mon- ' duping ground tests at Santa ?ana, Calif., the Atomic Energy mmission announced here, fhe still-experimental reactor is the type designed ultimately to >pel a spaceship further into ce by electrical propulsion — ir the spacecraft has been sted into orbit by rockets em- dng conventional fuel. 1‘The expected high performance I electrical propulsion devices hmts the use of smaller and s costly missile booster systems perform missions in space,” AEC said in announcing the |cess of the test. ★★★ [COLUMBIA, Mo. — Students a 20th Century literature |ass at the University of Mis- uri were taken aback when Ny reported to their assigned pom. No. 110 in the Arts and hence Building. [Room 110 is a women’s rest om. [Dr. Donald F. Drummond, the structor, moved the class to bother room, commenting: ! fa It’ S a very small ladies room fcd there are 105 students in ■•e course.” TODA Y IN EL PASO Sliort’n Sweet— Democratic Theme EL PASO DB—Texas Democrat ic party leaders bave set their sights on the shortest, happiest state convention in recent party history. Last night, Democratic guber natorial nominee John Connally, Gov. Price Daniel and their work ers freely said they saw nothing but harmony in store for Tuesday’s state-wide gathering at the El Paso County Coliseum. Two things might disturb the current peaceful co-existence of liberal and conservative Demo crats who battled bitterly for state party control at previous state conventions. 1. THE HARRIS COUNTY delegation, which swings the larg- Education Aid Bill Presented To Congress WASHINGTON UP)'— Senate- House conferees, smashing a long deadlock, Monday reached final agreement on a $2.35-hill ion fed eral aid bill for the nation’s 2,040 colleges and universities. Both sides gave ground in the final compromise, but all three types of assistance from the orig inal Senate bill were included. These are: classroom construc tion aid for all institutions, funds for needy students, and grants for community junior colleges. Pres ident Kennedy has backed the Sen ate bill. . The House voted only for the construction funds. Leaders of both sides praised the final product and predicted that it would win passage in both House and Senate with bipartisan support. The college bill seems certain to be the only part of Kennedy’s big education aid package to win final approval in the 87th Congress'. Married Students Are On Record Aggie Wives Council has com piled a list of all married stu dents with their addresses and major. Clubs interested in hav ing the names of those pertain ing to their clubs can obtain them from the master list by contacting Aggie Wives Council secretary, Mrs. Sylvia Bookman, A-10-Z College View, VI 6-8668. est vote of the convention—665 out of 5,461—attended a caucus Monday night while other dele gates attended a series of fund raising $12.50-a-plate dinners hon oring Connally. An ultra-conservative group urged t adoption of a resolution asking that National Democratic Committeeman Byron Skelton, Temple, be ousted for his so-called liberal tendencies. Skelton’s term runs until the 1964 presidential year. 2. A FLYING SQUAD of high union officials continued negotia tions with Connally and other par ty leaders over a party platform that would favor labor more than platforms of previous years when state labor forces were allied with convention minorities. State AFL- CIO President Hank Brown prom ised a progress report early Tues day. “It is past time when the work ingman automatically votes Demo cratic,” Brown told reporters Mon day. “We are not going to be hard-nosed about it but we will work hardest for the candidate wdio offers us the most.” THE SAME 27 platform de mands presented Democi’ats were offered the state Republican con vention in Fort Worth Monday. Otherwise, there was nothing but harmony signs for the con- ventory that temporary chairman Dolph Briscoe, prominent Uvalde ranchman and former legislator, will gavel to order. “I believe it will be the most harmonious convention I have ever attended, and I have attended quite a few,” said Daniel in his last appearance as titular head of the party Monday. Connally officially became the party leader at the convention. Aggie Players Prepare To Open New Season This year’s first Aggie Players meeting' will be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Music Hall. The year’s program will be outlined by director C. K. Esten. Two of the productions hilled for this year are “The Male Ani mal” Nov. 6 and “The Lady’s Not For Burning,” opening Dec. 9. Casting for these plays will con tinue today through Thursday. All Aggies and residents of the Bryan-College Station area inter ested in participating are invited to attend. Polio Vaccine’s Fate Here Under Study GOP Prepares Convention To Top Democratic Rally FORT WORTH DP)_-Texas Re publicans wheeled through various preliminaries Monday and set the stage for what promises to be their most lousing convention in history. On the eve of the convention, some 3,200 delegates were still drawing battle lines in the race for state Republican chairman. Seeking the state post are Peter O’Donnell of Dallas, state cam paign manager for GOP guber natorial candidate Jack Cox, and steel company executive Don Na pier of Richmond, in Fort Bend MSC Hosts Management Seminar Here Some 30 management personnel of the Dallas Power & Light Co. arrived on campus Sunday after noon. They are participating in a management seminar which began Monday and continues through Saturday afternoon. President Earl Rudder wel comed the visitors to the campus Sunday evening during an infor mal meeting and buffet. President C. A. Tatum of the Dallas Power & Light Co. opened Monday’s session of the seminar with a discussion of “The Man agement Job.” Other speakers to address the personnel include in dustrial consultants and members of the academic world. The A&M Division of Business Administration is conducting this seminar for persons from the mid dle management echelon of the Dallas utilities firm. A similar program is planned Oct. 21 for an other group of some 30 manage ment pei'sons of the same firm. The annual executive develop ment course held on the A&M campus early each year attracts management personnel from a va riety of. regional and national firms. The seminar planned for the Dallas Power & Light Co. person nel is similar to that of the an nual course, Eckles said. County. Tad Smith of El Paso is retiring from the post. TEXAS’ LEADING Republicans, Cox and U.S. Sen. John Tower, lean toward O’Donnell as do most of the GOP officials. The executive committee Mon day approved a rule which in ef fect will leave Smith in the driv er’s. seat until after the Nov. 8 election. It was pointed out that this step was taken to insure the status quo of the campaign and to diminish the possibility of any major changes at this stage of the race. The executive committee heard a report from the state finance chairman and concluded, Smith said, that the party must “counter John Connally’s dollars with Re publican workers.” ■ Smith said the Republicans can not match the Democratic guber natorial candidate’s finances but, he added, “we have a weapon—a whole lot of enthusiastic door-to- door workers Who can wage an extensive local campaign.” “I WOULD RATHER have 10,000 workers than $10,000,” Smith declared, “or even one mil lion dollars for that matter.” Aggie Dies In Auto Crash Robert J. Strange, 21, member of the Class of ’63, was killed in stantly last Wednesday in the head-on crash of his car and an other on a crowded Nevada high way. Three other persons died in the crash. Strange attended school last fall’s first semester after two in itial years here. He was a former member of Co. C-2 and the Fresh man Drill Team. Others killed were James E. Un derwood, 20, a Texas Tech student accompanying Strange; Robert Hammond Jr. of Las Vegas, the driver of the second car; and Ron ald Bowman, also of Las Vegas, who was a passenger in the Ham mond auto. ¥ Medics May Axe Sunday’s Drive The fate of A&M’s next mass oral polio vaccine program will be determined in a meeting tonight after the weekend’s announcement from Washington that the Type III Sabin vaccine might be harmful to adults. Dr. Charles R. Lyons, director of the college hospital, will meet with Bryan-College Station area physicians and civic club leaders tonight to decide when to conduct the Type III drive. The drive was originally scheduled for Sunday, but will probably be postponed, Lyons said. Type I vaccine was dis tributed by the hospital during the summer. TONIGHT’S MEETING comes on the heels of an an nouncement by the U.S. Public* - Health Service that use of the Type III vaccine should be temporarily halted for adults. The decision, announced by Surgeon General Luther Terry, followed a day-long meeting of a committee of polio experts who advise the Public Health Service on polio vaccines. The committee’s session had been moved up from Sept. 27 after Canadian authorities recommend ed against further mass use of the mouth-administered vaccine pend ing further study of its effects. THE CANADIAN Federal Health Department acted after re ceiving reports of four cases of paralytic polio among four million persons who had received the Sa bin live-virus vaccine. The advisory committee met for nearly 10 hours before making its recommendation. Before Dr. Terry read the official recommen dation, Dr. Edward D. Shaw of the University of California School of Medicine, one of the experts, told reporters what the panel had de cided. DR. SHAW said by adults, the committee meant anyone past school age. Dr. Terry, in a news conference following the meeting, said the committee studied in detail 16 cases of polio that have occurred in persons who received one of the three types of Sabin oral polio vaccine. There were two cases in the Type I group, one in Type II and 13 in Type III. All of those strick en with Type III polio were adults. The committee believes there is sufficient evidence to indicate at least some of these cases have been caused by the vaccine,” Dr. Terry said. “May I Help You, Sir?” Bill Andrews, ’63 from El Paso, finds the more pleasant with pretty Joan Payne deal- grueling task of registering for classes at ing out rooms for the Housing Office. Saturday’s organized madhouse is much JFK Wed Only One Time, Say Publications WASHINGTON UP)—A whisper campaign that President Kennedy once secretly married a divorcee was branded baseless by two pub lications Monday. Newsweek magazine explored the long-circulated rumor in an article to be printed in this week’s edition. The Washington Post, which owns Newsweek, printed the article in advance. Both publica tions labeled the rumor ground less. THE RUMOR—the alleged “evi dence” for which is an unsup ported passage in a genealogy book—has been current more than a year. The White House declined to comment to newsmen Monday, as it has in the past. To citizens who write the White House about the rumor, this re ply goes out: “The President has been married only once—to his wife Jacqueline Kennedy.” The Associated Press and other news organizations have checked many sources over the months and never found substantiation for the report of an early marriage. THE RUMOR stems from a pas sage in a privately printed family history, “The Blauvelt Family Genealogy,” written by a member of the family’s 10th generation, Louis Blauvelt. He died at 82, two years before the book was published in 1957. The Blauvelts came to this coun try from Holland in 1638. In tracing their descendants, one en try in the book under the 11th gen eration, says: “DURIE, KERR, Malcolm, Isa bel O. Cooper. We have no birth date. She was born Kerr, but took the name of her stepfather. She first married Firmin Desloge, IV. They were divorced. Durie then married F. John Bersbach. They were divorced, and she married, third, John F. Kennedy, son of Joseph P. Kennedy, one time am bassador to England. There wei'e no children of the second or third marriages.” The genealogy adds that a daughter was born to the mar riage to Desloge. NEWSWEEK said that in Blau- velt’s records, now in the custody of his daughter, Mrs. William K. Smith, of East Orange, N.J., there is no substantiation for the Ken nedy marriage reference in the genealogy. Under the entry for the alleged marriage to ‘John F. Kennedy’ there is only an old clipping from a Miami gossip column, reporting Miss Malcolm and young Jack Kennedy had been seen in a res taurant right after World War II. Mrs. Smith’s husband, William, informed The Associated Press that there is only one notation concerning a Kennedy marriage in the records of Louis Blauvelt.