The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 23, 1962, Image 3

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THE BATTALiON
Tuesday, October 23, 1962
College Station, Texas
Page 3
Vatican Council
worship. •
A broad-scale plan for liturgi
cal modifications presented to the
Vatican Ecumenical Council
touched off an apparently brisk
round of debate.
“Some defended it,” a commun
ique said. “Others impugned it.”
Details of the plan were not
disclosed, but preparatory reports
have indicated it would include a
considerable overhauling of ritual
and worship practices.
Steps to encourage fuller con
gregational participation, to bring
lYERhfi bhe alter and people closer to
gether and to substitute national
tongues for part of the Latin Mass
have been discussed, among other
measures.
SOME OF THE proposed
changes are viewed by church
leaders as an aid to helping close
the chasm between Rome and other
denominations.
WESTINGHOUSE
GOLDEN DAYS
Catholic
Rituals
Efforts in that direction got an
other major boost Monday when
the Vatican Secretariat for Chris
tian Unity was accorded official
status on a par with the other 10
proposal-drafting commissions.
Headed by Augustin Cardinal
Bea, a renowned biblical scholar,
it will draw up and present spe
cific measures to the council for
bringing closer ties with other
church bodies.
Announcement was made of
members elected to three addition
al drafting commissions—on re
ligious orders, the sacraments, and
seminaries and schools.
THE M EMBERS elected, as
those named to seven other sim
ilar commissions earlier, make up
a wide cross-section of nations and
viewpoints.
Influence of both United States
and west-central European church
leaders showed up strongly in the
over-all results.
Of 160 bishops elected, altogeth
er, 101 of them were candidates
who had been endorsed by U.S.
prelates. Eighty-nine of the win
ners had the backing of a Eu
ropean coalition which seeks ex
tensive church reforms.
In 47 instances, bishops elected
had the support of the Europeans
and the U.S. hierarchy, which is
generally more middle-ground in
its approach to changes.
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KRAFT
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BRYAN
Pasadena Student Wins Award
Claude Buck Hammond, right, of Pasadena, a senior in
dustrial distribution student, receives a $500 scholarship
check from W. E. Blumberg, left, president of the Houston
Industrial Distributors Association. Looking on is Dr. C. H.
Groneman, head of the Department of Industrial Education.
AMONG- THE PROFS
Smith Commended
For NASA Work
Journalism Council
Will Meet Saturday
Fifteen members of the Journal
ism Advisory Council will be here
Friday and Saturday for an an
nual fall meeting.
The council will participate in
a Journalism Emphasis Day pro
gram Friday night. A business
session and luncheon are set for
Saturday. The agenda includes
discussion of a media scholarship
plan and other programs in the
Department of Journalism.
Council chairman is Staley Mc-
Brayer, publisher of the Arlington
CUBA BLOCKADE
(Continued From Page I)
mated could reach more than 2,-
200 miles and threaten all but the
northwest corner of the United
States.
The reconnaissance photographs,
enlarged 30 times, showed two
launchers with several missiles on
trucks nearby.
IT WAS indicated that the pres
ence of these offensive-type mis
siles was definitely established to
the government’s satisfaction only
Sunday, after nearly a week of
round-the-clock study by literally
hundreds of photo interpretation
experts.
The spokesman declined to say
how the photographs were taken
other than to describe the planes
which did the work as military
reconnaissance crafts.
The spokesman said the mobile
medium-range missiles were in
stalled “rather recently.”
He said that in a matter of per
haps 24 hours U. S. surveillance
spotted an increase of perhaps 50
per cent in missile equipment.
“We do not have the means to
intercept this kind of missile,”
said the spokesman.
HE ALSO indicated that the
warning time of any firing would
be very slight.
The U. S. government has rea
son to believe the ' sites are being
built and manned by Russians, the
spokesman said.
State Department authorities
estimated there are several thou
sand Russian military personnel
now in Cuba.
The Pentagon spokesman sug
gested that the Cubans have not
had time to learn to install and
handle the missiles.
At least four or* five different
types of missile bases have been
recorded in U. S. reconnaissance
photographs. Under . preparation
but not yet considered fully opera
tional are a number of intermedi
ate range ballistic missile sites
for weapons with a range of 2,200
miles.
News-Texan.
President Earl Rudder will be
the featured speaker at the lunch
eon. Other guests will include
Mrs. Rudder, journalism faculty
and wives of the council members.
Attending the meeting for the
first time will be four new council
members. They are Robert Haney,
managing editor of Progressive
Farmer; James A. Byron, news
director of WBAP AM-FM-TV in
Fort Worth; George Shannon, ed
itor of the Shreveport Times; and
Jerry Woodard, advertising direc
tor of the Gary, Ind., Post-Tribune.
Other expected are Arthur An-
grist of Dearborn, Mich., director
of employee relations for Ford
Motor Co.; Glen Wilber, Houston
advertising executive; Bill Barn
ard of Dallas, Associated Press
Bureau chief; James A. Knight,
Jr., of Point Comfort, public rela
tions for Texas ALCOA; L. O.
Tiedt, Houston Chamber of Com
merce agricultural department;
Calvin Pigg, Texas Research Foun
dation agricultural specialist.
Also Frank Fields, Humble Oil
Co. public relations, Houston; Bert
Brandt, Houston photographer;
Bill Berger, publisher of the Hondo
Anvil-Herald; anl L. B. Smith,
Brady Herald publisher.
An A&M industrial engineering
professor has been commended for
the success of two computer orien
tation courses he conducted for
Manned Spacecraft Center person
nel at Houston.
Robert L. Smith Jr., who also
heads the Data Processing Center,
received a letter of commendation
from Robert R. Gilruth, director
of the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration installation
in Houston.
“Students of these classes have
praised both your professional
capabilities as a teacher and the
course content,” Gilruth said. “The
formal class appraisal supervised
by the' Manned Spacecraft Center
Training Office indicates a type
of presentation well above aver
age.”
“You are to be commended for
your efforts and apparent high in
terest in the conduct of these
classes, and I wish to express my
appreciation for your work,” the
Manned Spacecraft Center director-
said.
Gilruth added the Manned Space
craft Center is fortunate in hav
ing institutions such as A&M in
terested in the program to upgrade
NASA’s professional personnel.
“Cooperative ventures of this
nature should prove to be mutually
beneficial,” he said.
★ ★ ★
Dr. H. J. Thomasson, a Dutch
medical researcher who earned an
international reputation with his
studies of the relationship of “Di
etary Fat and Atherosclerosis,”
will lecture here Thursday. Thom
asson is director of the Biological
and Nutritional Sections of the
Dutch Unilever Laboratories,
Vlaardingen, Holland.
The lecture, another in the
Graduate School lecture series, is
scheduled at 8 p.m. in Room 231
of the Chemistry Building.
Thomasson received his under
graduate and medical degrees from
Utrecht University in the Nether
lands in the 1930s. He assumed
the direction of the biological re
search at the Dutch Unilever lab
oratories in 1941. His work has
been mainly related to the nutri
tion of fats, especially with re
spect to th§ so-called fatty acids,
their function and their relation
to atherosclerosis.
Among his accomplishments is
the only generally acceptable
method for the bio-assay of the
essential fatty acids. Thomasson
also determined the required basic
chemical structure related to the
function of the essential fatty
acids.
Thomasson is a laureate of the
Royal Flemish Academy of Medi
cine of Belgium; is on the editorial
advisory board of “Progress in the
Chemistry of Fats and Other Lip
ids;” a member of the permanent
European committee for research
on toxicity hazards; a member of
the Dutch advisory board for the
study of atherosclerosis; and is on
the executive committee of the
Dutch Government Institution for
Experimental Animals.
★ ★ ★
Dr. Everett R. Glazener, associ
ate professor in the Department
of Industrial Education, served as
consultant and speaker at the aix
nual convention of the Iowa State
Teachers Association in Des
Moines Friday and Saturday.
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TAPE RECORDERS AND ACCESSORIES
TRANSISTOR RADIOS AND BATTERIES
La Fayette Radio Electronics
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3219 Texas Ave.
less
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Two approaches to the
“man’s deodorant” problem
If a man doesn’t mind shaving under his arms, he will probably
find a woman’s roll-on satisfactory. Most men, however, find it
simpler and surer to use Mennen Spray Deodorant. Mennen Spray
was made to get through to the skin, where perspiration starts.
And made to work all day. More men use Mennen Spray than any
other deodorant. How about you? 64* and $1.00 plus tax
21 Great Tobaccos make 20 Wonderful Smokes!
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