T ARCHIVE BOX 211 F. E. mmmmm - 3 C Thousands Expected At A&M Convocation MAYORS GREET CONVOCATION VISITORS . . Ernest Langford, CS, left; John Naylor, Bryan By GERRY BROWN Battalion News Editor A&M is poised for the big gest open house in the institu tion’s history Friday—the Century Study Convocation. Thousands of persons are scheduled to visit the campus to see progress which has been made in recent years and hear plans for the college’s future. President Earl Rudder and Dean of Engineering- Fred Benson, con vocation chairman, are inviting all citizens to attend the event. A major purpose of the con vocation is to honor the 100 Texans who make up the Century Council. THE CENTURY STUDY has been submitted to the Board of Directors, which will use the sur vey as a guide in formally present ing its “Blueprint for Progress” at the convocation main session. The blueprint will also be based on an internal “aspirations study” con ducted by A&M’s faculty, staff and students. College officials have arranged for five speakers to be heard at the convocation. Principal speaker will be James E. Webb, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Webb, who was appointed NASA administrator in February, 1961, by President Kennedy, is a former Director of the Bureau of the Budget and Undersecretary of State. He was president and trustee of Educational Services, Inc., of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- Cbe Battalion Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1962 Number 33 BP Student Wives Contestants Now ?or Mrs. A&M Twelve student wives have al ready filed as entrants in the Bee. 8 Mrs. Texas A&M Contest, ■Mrs. Nat Alvis, president of the Jfcgie Wives Council, announced |Wednesday. The wife of any student cur- [rer.tly enrolled in the college Bay apply as a contestant. Dead- lline for applications is Dec. 1. I Application forms may be se- Rfured from Mrs. Alvis, and a iform is printed on page 3 of this tissue of The Battalion. I The winner will be announced lat a dance Dec. 8 in the Ball- Jroom of the Memorial Student Center. Contest judges and prizes will be announced at a later date. Third Installment Fees Now Payable Third installment fees are pay able now in the Fiscal office. Deadline for payment without penalty is Nov. 20. The fee is $56.85. Wire Review By The Associated Press WORLD NEWS NEW DELHI, India — Prime Minister Nehru got a dynamic new- defense minister and 148 pounds of gold for the Himalayan war effort on his 73rd birthday Wed nesday. The new defense minister is Y. B. Chavan, 48, who has a record as an able and imaginative admin istrator as chief minister of Maha rashtra State of which Bombay is the capital. ★ ★ ★ MOSCOW—The idea of an non- agression pact betw-een the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the Warsaw Pact nations was re vived Wednesday night by the gov ernment newspaper Izvestia. It printed a political commen tary which said: “A pact of non aggression would not break the existing correlation of forces be tween the blocs. It would remain the same.” U.S. NEWS WASHINGTON—The United States warned the Soviet Union on Wednesday not to build a naval base in Cuba. State Department spokesman Lincoln White said that if it did, “I w r ould assume appropriate meas ures w-ould be taken.” ★ ★ ★ C H I C A G O—Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson said Wed nesday the United States “has not—and we will never—enter any commitment by which Com munist imperialism shall be fort ified against the united action of free men in this hemisphere or any other.” With elements still unsettled in the Cuban situation, he as serted: “In the future, as in the past, we must he, and we shall be, ready to meet force with force and to seek honorable peace with all others who seek honorable peace also.” ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON—President Ken nedy and Chancellor Konrad Ade nauer of West Germany w-ere re ported Wednesday night in agree ment that the Cuban issue must be resolved before any new West ern initiative for settling other cold war disputes—including Ber lin. Chapel Service Set For Thanksgiving A special Thanksgiving service is scheduled in the All-Faiths Chapel next Monday night. The service, at 8 p.m. following the Thanksgiving meal in college dining halls, is sponsored by stu dent chaplains and the YMCA. The program, with the Rev. Norman Anderson of the A&M Presbyterian Church as speaker, is designed for students and fac ulty-staff members. A&M’s Singing Cadets will also participate. JAMES E. WEBB ... to present keynote address nology at the time of his latest appointment. WEBB WILL speak at the main convocation session at 2 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coliseum. An added event of the 2 p.m. meeting will be the presentation of A&M’s first Distinguished Alumni Awards. Receiving awards will be: Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, Class of 1931, commander of the U. S. Air Force Systems Command. John W. Newton of Beaumont, Class of 1912, former director and general manager of the Refining Division of Magnolia Petroleum Co. W. W. LYNCH of Dallas, Class of 1922, president of Edison Elec tric Institute and president and chairman of Texas Power and Light Co. Board. Dr. Edward F. Knipling of Beltsville, Md., Class of 1930, a research scientist with the U. S. Department of Agriculture Ento mology Research Division. The four were chosen from nominations submitted by citizens of the state. Final selection was made by a nine-member committee comprised of former students and staff members. CONVOCATION ACTIVITIES Friday will begin with registration and informal receptions in the various academic departments at 8 a.m. After the departmental open houses, four different speakers will address the degree-granting schools of the college. Dr. G. M. Watkins, director of agricultural instruction, will speak at the School of Agriculture pro gram. The topic of his talk, to be given at 8:40 a.m. in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom, is “Progress in Agriculture.” Dr. F. Champion Ward, official of the Ford Foundation, will be the speaker for the School of Arts and Sciences program. “New Frontiers for Americans” will be the topic of his talk at 10:30 a.m. in DeWare Field House. Dr. John R. Pierce, Bell Tele phone Laboratory scientist, will speak at the School of Engineering program. Piei’ce will speak on “Satellite Communication” at 11 a.m. in Guion Hall. Dr. M. R. Clarkson, associate administrator of the U. S. Depart ment of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service, will speak at the School of Veterinary Medicine program. The topic of Clarkson’s talk will be .“Veterinary Medicine— Our Responsibility to the Future. ,r Clarkson will speak at 11 a.m. in the Veterinary Medicine Hospital. AT 12:15 a luncheon honoring' the 100 members of the Century Council will be served in Sbisa Dining Hall. Also to be honored at the luncheon are faculty mem bers, staff and students who par ticipated in the aspirations study. All persons attending the con vocation have been invited to the luncheon. Tickets are $2.50 per person. Bryan and College Station Mayors John Naylor and Ernest Lang-ford have officially pro claimed Friday as “A&M College Convocation Day” in the two cities. DR. JOHN R. PIERCE DR. M. R. CLARKSON DR. G. M. WATKINS DR. F. CHAMPION WARD GUIDES FOR FUTURE Hungarian Courts BUDAPEST, Hungary <•£’> — Hungarian Communist officials are considering establishing so- called social courts to handle mi- ■ nor cases, such as disciplinary of- j Convocation ceremonies Friday fenses and petty theft. This nation ; will be highlighted by the formal of 10 million had a million liti- announcement of the “Blueprint gants and 210,000 trials in 1961. | For Progress,” to be presented to ‘Blueprint’ Tops Convocation ALUMNI AWARD WINNERS (clockwise) Lynch, Newton, Knipling, Schriever Convocation Events 8-10:30 a. m.—Registration and informal receptions in academic departments 8:40 a. m.—School of Agriculture program, Dr. G. M. Watkins speaking, MSC Ballroom 10:30 a. m.—-School of Arts and Sciences program. Dr. F. Champion Ward speaking, G. Rollie White Coliseum 11 a. m.—School of Engineering program. Dr. John R. Pierce speaking, Guion Hall 11 a. m.—School of Veterinary Medicine program. Dr. M. R. Clarkson speaking, veterinary medicine hospital 12:15 p. m.—Century Council luncheon, Sbisa Hall 2 p. m.—Convocation, presentation of “Blueprint for Progress” by Eugene B. Darby, G. Rollie White Coliseum 2 p. m.—Presentation of distinguished alumni awards to Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, John W. Newton, W. W. Lynch and Edward F. Knipling, G. Rollie White Coliseum 2 p. m.—Keynote address, James E. Webb, G. Rollie White Coliseum 4 p. m.—Corps of Cadets review, main drill field the student body, faculty, former students and guests in G. Rollie White Coliseum at 2 p.m. This blueprint is the result of a 19-month internal and external study which will guide develop ment of the school until its 100th anniversary in 1976. It will be presented by Eugene B. Darby, president of the Board of Direc tors. The blueprint is based on data j contained in two board-directed j reports: an internal “Aspirations | Study” conducted by faculty, staff I and students; and an external | “Search of the Century” by 100 citizens appointed to the Century Council. Darby called the work of these study groups “invaluable contribu tions to the development of A&M.” Mapping out long-ranged pro grams of excellence to be achieved in the next 14 years, the blueprint “will direct A&M toward achieve ment of prominence among insti tutions of higher education,” the ] • Close relationships between board president said. j researcher and extension educator The blueprint calls for the fol- ; to better disseminate laboratory lowing programs to be instituted | discoveries to the fields and fac- or strengthened: j tories where it can be applied. • Programs to secure the high- I • Find new financial resources est caliber of faculty members with | to support heavy expenses required provisions to reward individual 1 in college development and appor- achievement. i tion available money in light of ® Selective development of I goals and aspirations of the school, strong programs of instruction in ! • Inform the people of Texas engineering, natural and applied of the services as well as the needs science, agriculture, veterinary i of the institution, medicine and liberal arts with I • Insistence upon excellence as stress on space-related fields of | the watchword of every aspect of study. J college activity. • Attraction of students char- j acterized by outstanding intellec tual capacity, maximum integrity and dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge. Today’s Thought For man is by nature afraid . of death and of the dissolution Additions and improvements | of the t^y. but there is this to physical facilities, particularly those used in the sciences and tech nologies of the Space Age. • Strengthened research efforts both as an instructional technique most startling fact, that he who has put on the faith of the Cross despises even what is naturally fearful, and for Christ’s sake U not afraid of death.—St. Athan- as well as a service to the state. 1 asius