iSIFI S new N later t Planv nee due BOO Expected To Graduate Saturday Che Battalion - Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1963 Number 56 62 Graduates Will Receive Bars Saturday sfPPiffgfH Sixty-two senior cadets who will graduate Saturday morning are also slated to receive the gold bars of a second lieutenant and a com mission in one of the armed forces. The commissioning exercise is scheduled at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in G. Rollie V/hite Coliseum with Air Force Maj. Gen. John F. Fos- | ter as the main speaker. ELEVEN CADETS are slated to receive commissions in the Air i Force while 50 senior ROTC ca dets have applied for commissions in the Army. One student will also be commissioned in the reg ular Marine Corps. Gen. Foster, president of the Re sumed a second lieutenant in the Army Air Corps Reserve. He saw service dining World War II with the Second Air Force and later in the combat operations section of the Mediterranean Al lied Air Force. RETURNING TO San Antonio after the war, Gen. Foster re mained active in the Air Reserve program. He organized and com manded for ten years the 433rd Troop Carrier Wing and earned the rank of brigadier general in 1954. His present assignment is aide to the commander of the Twelfth Air Force in Waco. Gen. Foster, DR. R. E. GOODRICH serve Officer’s Association of the . who was promoted to the rank of United States, began his service ! major general in 1961, is a mem- j her of the Reserve Forces Policy ' Board of the Department of De career in 1931 when he completed flight training and was commis- EASE! j)| the ^ idriifi, H rease. Smiles Under Sabers White-Clad Ross Volunteers provide a saber t'icial honor guard the Ross Volunteers took arch for a smiling Gov. and Mrs. John Con- part in the traditional and colorful festivi- nally just prior to the inaugural ceremonies ties, including the inaugural parade. The in Austin Tuesday. As- the governor’s of- A&M Band also marched in the parade. PR LAW, PURYEAR Student Janitor To Increase In Jobs Spring ■am expanded program of mak- | ng dormitory janitorial jobs avail- iblc to students was outlined Wed- xesday. <: The success of the program .-linges upon the cooperation of ’'itudents residing in dormitories, '’lean of Students James P. Han- iigan and Walter H. Parsons Jr., iepd of the Department of Build- ngs and Utilities, said. PARSONS ALSO emphasized that he use of students will not af fect the number of full-time jani tors. The new Plant Sciences and Architecture buildings shortly will ifeate the need for additional jani- ;orial service. B.aw and Puryear Halls will be Served by student janitors starting J&fly in the spring semester. ■Later, I hope Walton and Hart Sails can be added,” Parsons said, ‘but the location of showers in these halls creates a problem.” •WO STUDENTS worked dur ing the fall semester as janitors ifor three- floors of Dormitory 13, B()0'' 3ac ^ student working 18 hours weekly. The experiment proved satisfactory, as student residents cooperated, Parsons said. The Student Senate last year suggested the possible use of stu dents as janitors, Hannigan said. Students long have served as din ing hall waiters. The dean of students residing in dorms where student janitors work need to be especially careful to avoid sweeping dirt and trash into the halls and to refrain from destructive pranks. HANNIGAN NOTED recent re ports from at least one dormi- toi’y of “excessive water damage.” He also said some students burn trash in a wastebasket, on the “highly dangerous assumption” that a masonry building is fire proof. The possibility that savings re sulting from the use of student janitors can he used to provide more things such as bulletin boards in individual rooms and door clos ers on the ramps was cited by the dean. PARSONS SAID students resid ing in the vicinity of Puryear and Law Halls and interested in the possibility of working as janitors should contact the Placement Of fice immediately. More applicants are needed than immediate open ings because of possible turnover and other reasons, he ,said. Increments of work in Law and Puryear Halls readily lend them selves to the use of varying num bers of student janitors, Parsons said. Work assignments easily di vided to be acceptable to a vary ing number of young men is a key to a successful student labor program. The dormitories with long hallways do not easily lend themselves to student labor, he explained. The two full-time janitors in Law and Puryear Halls could be replaced by as many as 10 stu dents, part-time janitors, Parsons pointed out. The number of daily hours a student janitor works will vary depending upon the amount of free time each student has for this purpose. r. F. R. Duke To Hold elch Chemistry Chair Dr. Frederick R. Duke, one of the world’s foremost authorities on oxidation and fused salt technol ogy, has been named to fill the Robert A. Welch Foundation chair of chemistry here. Duke, author of more than 100 scholarly papers on analytical and physical chemistry, is scheduled to come to the college in Septem ber from Iowa State University. the University of Illinois in 1940. After one year of postdoctorate study at the University of Illinois, he became a research chemist for DuPont Chemical Co. In 1942 he joined the faculty of Princeton University and in 1945 was named an assistant professor of chem istry at Michigan State Univer sity. * vlll DR. F. R. DUKE DUKE MOVED to Iowa State THE WELCH RESEARCH chair j University in 1948 and was named was endowed through a $650,000 I a professor there in 1954. grant from the estate of Robert j He has served as consultant to , Alonzo Welch, Houston philanthro- | many firms including the Man- lll pist, who sponsored more than ! hattan District on uranium anal- $8.6 million of fundamental chem- j ysis in 1942-45. 1' ical research in Texas. The new Welch The chemist was born Mar. 17, 1917, in Unityville, S. Dak., and attended Dakota Wesleyan Uni versity. He received a B.A. de gree from the University of South professor is a member of many learned societies, including the American Chemical Society, the American Electro chemical Society, Sigma Xi, Alpha Chi Sigma, Phi Lambda Upsilon Dakota in 1937 and a Ph.D. from ! and the Iowa Academy of Science. Large Crowd Bite To Hear Paul Harvey Early ticket sales indicate a large area representation at the annual Bryan - College Station Chamber of Commerce member ship banquet Jan. 28, Gene Sutp- hen, chamber president, said Wed nesday. “The response has been unusual since special invitations went out to Brazos Valleye residents to join us,” he continued. Paul Harvey, prize-winning radio newscaster, will speak at the ban quet in Sbisa Hall. More than 1,500 persons are expected. fense. MAJ. GEN. J. H. FOSTER Here Is Your Final Exam Schedule Here is the official schedule of final examinations for the fall semester: Date Time Class Jan. 19 1-4 p. m. TWF3, TThF3, TF3 Jan. 21 8-11 a. m. MWF8 Jan. 21 1-4 p. ih. TThSFl Jan. 22 8-11 a. m. MWF9 Jan. 22 1-4 p. m. MWThl Jan. 23 8-11 a. m. MWF10 Jan. 23 1-4 p. m. TF1 Jan. 24 8-11 a. m. MSTThlO Jan. 24 1-4 p. m. MWTh2 Jan. 25 8-11 a. m. MWF11 Jan. 25 1-4 p. m. M4TThll Jan. 26 8-11 a. m. TTH9F2 Jan. 26 1-4 p. m. TF2 No ROTC Changes Due In Next Year No change is being contemplated in college and university ROTC programs during the next fiscal year, a Pentagon official told the Associated Press Wednesday. The official added, however, that elimination of all ROTC units A&M Researcher Dies In Florida Of Asphyxiation The body of a reseai’cher with the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology was found Tues day in his Panama City, Fla, home. Investigators said John Alli son Lyons Jr., 48, died of accident al asphyxiation. No inquest was planned. Dr. Dale Leipper, head of the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology, said last night that Lyons had only been in Florida about a month at the time of his death. Leipper said that the dead man had been hired in California and sent directly to Florida, where he worked under a contract with the Navy. Leipper said Lyons had only been on the A&M campus for brief periods. An Associated Press report said: Lyons was working under con tract with the Navy Mines De fense Laboratory at Panama City. Officers said fellow employes requested a check after Lyons failed to report for work Monday or Tuesday. The body was found on a couch in the living room with a gas heater burning nearby. Police said he apparently had been dead since late Saturday night. from high schools is contemplated in the budget recommendations President Kennedy submitted to Congress today. Even though no college changes are planned during the next year, the Pentagon spokesman added that the Defense Department is contemplating a cutback in the senior ROTC program sometime in the future so that such train ing would be available only to col lege juniors and seniors. There is no request for money to maintain the ROTC program in high schools during the fiscal year starting next July 1, the official added, whereas during the current year $5 million was appropriated. Some 60,000 youths are enrolled now in such courses. The Budget Bureau is request ing approximately the same amount as last year for maintain ing the Reserve Officer Training Corps in colleges and universities, so that at least during the new fiscal year no change is contem plated in the senior ROTC pro- gi’am. Batt Publication Dates Announced After today’s edition Battal ion staff members will take a break, attempting to pass up coming final examinations. There will be no Batt tomorrow/and the only issue next week will be published on Thursday. During the week-long period between semesters The Battal ion will have one edition, Thurs day, Jan. 31. The first Batt of the spring semester will be Tuesday, Feb. 5. Rrofoeck To Visit The world famous Dave Bru- beck Quartet will present a two- hour program of the Brubeck flavor of modern jazz on campus Feb. 4, the first day of classes of the spring semester. The program, featuring Brubeck at the piano, is sponsored by Town Hall and will he given in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Dr. Goodrich Will Address New Grads Approximately! 400 under graduate and graduate stu dents are scheduled to receive degrees during commence ment exercises Saturday at 10 a. m. in G. Rollie White Coli seum. Principal speaker at the graduation ceremony will be Dr. Robert E. Goodrich Jr., pastor of the First Methodist Church of Dallas. THE EXERCISES WILL begin with an invocation by Kirk Black- ard, corps chaplain. Greeting the graduating stu dents, their families and their friends will be Eugene B. Darby, a member of the A&M Board of Directors, followed by Chancellor M. T. Harrington. President Earl Rudder will then introduce Goodrich as the main speaker. GOODRICH, A GRADUATE of Birmingham-Southern College at Birmingham, Ala., received his master’s degree from the Southern Methodist University School of Theology. He also holds an hon orary doctor of divinity degree from Centenary College. The speaker is well known over the x’adio and television waves. He has delivered five series of ser mons for the Methodist series of the Protestant Hour, a radio pro gram carried by 408 radio stations in North America and by the Armed Forces Overseas Network. THE MINISTER ENTERED the field of television in 1950, creat ing the weekly dramatic show, “The Pastor Calls,” which ran for nine years on KRLD-TV in Dallas. Goodrich is currently broadcast ing his shrmons each Sunday in Dallas. Every fourth Sunday’s services are televised by WFAA. He has been pastor of the Dallas First Methodist Church since 1946 and was a Wilson lecturer at Cen tenary College in 1960 and Finch lecturer at Thomasville, N. C., in 19,59. FOLLOWING THE speech by the Dallas minister, Rudder will begin the conferring of degrees. He will be assisted by Deans Wayne C. Hall, Frank W. R. Hu bert, Fred J. Benson and Director G. M. Watkins, who will present the graduates. Concluding the ceremony will be the singing of “The Spirit of Ag- gieland.” Robert L. Boone, A&M music director, will lead the sing ing. The Benediction will be given by Donald Neumann, civilian chap lain. Wire Review By The Associated Press WORLD NEWS BERLIN—Soviet Premier Khru shchev warned the balky Commun ist Chinese to get into line with the rest of the Red world and ac cept Moscow’s blueprint for ex pansion if they want to remain in the Soviet camp. In a highly emotional speech Wednesday before a gathering of Communist leaders from 70 coun tries, the Soviet leader delivered a sizzling rebuttal of Peking charges that he knuckled under in fear of the nuclear might of the United States. Declaring that his policies averted war and saved communism in Cuba, Khrushchev outlined the horrors of a nuclear conflict be tween the United States and the Soviet Union. He declared that the United States could loose a storm of 40,000 atomic and nuclear w r arheads capable of obliterating whole nations. U.S. NEWS WASHINGTON—Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark., introduced bills Wednesday to outlaw strikes against defense facilities and to give the government a new wea pon to deal with transport strikes such as the current East Coast-Gulf Coast dock workers’ strike. The defense facilities measure, McClellan told the Senate in a speech, would prohibit strikes or other works stoppages at missle sites and other defense facilities. ★ ★ ★ NEW YORK—In a rare test, a court ruled Wednesday that oc cupying a seat in a U.N. delega tion does not in itself entitle a per son to diplomatic immunity under U.S. la'rtr. The decision came in the case of a member of the Cuban U.N. mis sion, Robert Santiesteban Casa nova, 28, charged with conspiracy to commit espionage. TEXAS NEWS AUSTIN^- Texas lawmakers cheered and applauded Wednesday as Gov. John Connally told them what laws he wants passed for the next two years. Immediately after his speech, key senators and representatives indicated they strongly favored much of the vast legislative pro gram outlined by Connally. The new governor threw his weight behind several of what will be the most controversial bills of the session—c o n t r o 1 1 i n g loan sharks, election law reform, elim inating inequities in the sales tax. He also told the lawmaker’s it is urgent that they give him $50,000 as an emergency appropri ation to begin a committee study aimed at improving the field of higher education in Texas.