The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 24, 1963, Image 1

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    PRIOR TO BANQUET S PEECII
Reception To Honor Harvey
Paul Harvey, noted news com
mentator, will be honored at a
reception Monday afternoon at
the Triangle Restaurant prior
to his speech at the annual Bry-
an-College Station Chamber of
Commerce banquet that night.
Harvey, who is due to arrive
just before the 1:30 p.m. recep
tion, is also to make a tour of
the twin communities and the
A&M campus that afternoon.
Gene Sutphen, president of the
Chamber of Commerce, said
Wednesday that almost 1,200
tickets had been sold for the
event. Tickets will be on sale at
the main desk of the Memorial
Student Center until 5 p.m. to
day.
Sutphen said a capacity crowd
of 1,600 is expected for the ban
quet, to be held in Sbisa Hall
at 7:30 p.m. Joe Vincent, past
director of the C. of C., will be
master of ceremonies.
At the meeting, Ford D. Al
britton Jr., president of Albrit
ton Engineering Corp., will be
installed as chamber president.
Other new officers to be installed
include Freddie Wolters, super
intendent of the college farms,
as agricultural vice president.
Three of the new chamber di
rectors are from A&M. They in
clude Dorsey E. McCrory, assist
ant to the president; James P.
Hannigan, dean of students, and
Jim Lindsey, director of informa
tion and publications.
Harvey was voted top com
mentator of the year in a poll of
600 critics across the nation in
1962. He has been awarded six
honorary degrees and holds four-
gold medals from Valley Forge’s
Freedoms Foundation.
Twenty-nine of his broadcasts
have been entered in the Con
gressional record — an all-time
high. He has authored three
books in addition to writing a
t h r e e-times-a-week newspaper-
column.
While in the Brazos Valley
area, Harvey will make his daily
newscast for the American
Broadcasting Co. from radio sta
tion KORA in Bryan.
PAUL HARVEY
Cbe Battalion
Volume 60
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1963
Number 57
Baby, It’s Cold Outside
Pretty Patsy Williams painfully poses by the fountain in
front of Sbisa Hall, braving low temperatures and high
winds to provide a warm contrast for foot-long icicles hang
ing from the fountain. Patsy is a secretary in the College
Information office.
Wire
Review
By The Associated Press
WORLD NEWS
PARIS—France and West Ger-
lany agreed Wednesday to patch
Bmporapily their split on British
lethbership in the European Eco-
omic Community by submitting
P hel issue to the Common Market
lommission in Brussels for study.
|l This is the gist of a procedural
Pound'bclrd reached by President
'hai les de Gaulle and Chancellor
,'lonrad Adenauer in talks which
{jjJdlto their signing- Tuesday of a
reaty for diplomatic, defense and
,ultural cooperation between their
, wo nations.
pound 1 '
U.S NEWS
NEW YORK—White House
priess secretary Pierre Salinger
arrived quietly in New York
Wednesday to see if he could do
anything about the city’s 47-
day newspaper blackout.
p'Salinger’s arrival coincided
with the renewal for the first
time in a week of joint negotia
tions in the dispute. He took
^ no direct part in them.
:i 00 w ★ ★
i WASHINGTON — U.S. authori-
— ies studied the new Franch-Ger-
nan pact V/ednesday with some
zefl ' mprehension it might further split
Vestern ranks.
^Iia» President Kennedy was expected
* iM ^ ive news conference
y . Coffl'Thursday the first major U.S. re-
iction to the historic accord con-
, ‘luded by France’s President
' C Charles de Gaulle and West Ger-
nany’s Chancellor Konrad Aden-
—mer.
ed ^ ★ ★ ★
■NEW YORK—A record 32-
dav dock strike of East and
Gulf Coast ports neared an end
Wednesday, with the first of
610 idle ships expected to begin
- moving within 48 hours. ,
• MWaterfront peace moved a big
ft $1 step nearer during the day as
| y ¥'New Orleans shipowners fell in
‘ IS line with the government-out
lined 37-cent-an-hour contract
qUAN^ Pattern.
GlG#jp TEXAS NEWS
UflSEff'mAN ANTONIO—.Air Force doc
tors think they may have solved
;\N one of the problems of space flight
with a simple bit of advice: exer-
’‘•fi'vA bae. But exercise the right way.
f|Long space flights might make
gfeCyXy; an astronaut’s muscles go soft be-
IH c ause, in weightlessness, it doesn’t
SB Wvjtake any effort to move.
y|But isometric exercises can keep
ty: the muscles firm, Col. Earl W.
ivi; 1 Brannon said Wednesday. Bran-
non is chaix-man of the Department
W of Orthopedic Surger-y at the Lack
land Air Force Base Hospital.
★ ★ ★
lAUSTIN—Gov. John Connally’s
top priority money need waited
Wednesday while legislators took
a closer look at his “new look”
staff reorganization plans.
■However, Thursday’s prospects
for the $197,000 emergency ap
propriation package brightened
^(jdming the afternoon,
re*^ BThe Senate finance committee
iCl' e " .recommended approval of the
—^House-passed bill, thus clearing
the way for floor debate Thursday
if most of the senators agree:
>1$
New Buildup
In Red Cuba
Stirs Scions
WASHINGTON (Ah—The Cuban
issue erupted with renewed force
in the Senate Wednesday over re
ports of a new around-the-clock
Soviet military buildup on Prime
Minister Fidel Castro’s island. Sen.
Wayne Morse, D-Ore., ordered an
immediate investigation.
Morse said he has asked the
State Department for a quick
briefing for his Senate Latin-
American Affairs subcommittee.
His staff said, it has been tenta
tively set for 10 a.m. Friday. Wit
nesses were to be announced Thurs
day.
Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-
N.Y., who was one of the first
to sound the alarm last year over
reports of Soviet offensive mis
siles in Cuba, also told a reporter
he has “confirmed by official gov
ernment Sources” that a new in
tensive buildup is under way.
He said it involves tanks, guns,
amphibious vehicles, large amounts
of ammunition, planes, torpedo
boats and other Soviet weapons
pouring into the island.
A flurry was touched off by a
New York Times News Service re
port that the Soviet Union is
building and improving “highly
sophisticated ground and air de
fenses.”
U.S. Space Achievements,
Goals Topics Of Tiesta’
State Shivers
As Cold Wave
Still, Lingers
By The Associated Press
Texas’ cold wave crashed through
the zero mark Wednesday and
Thursday, bringing temperatures
as low as 10 below in far North
west Texas.
A hard freeze was felt every
where in the state Thursday morn
ing, with conditions particularly
bad in the Lower Rio Grande Val
ley where crop damage was ex
pected to be especially heavy.
THE DRY norther turned killer
when it took the life of John Dil
lon, 65, of Pike, near Dallas, from
exposure.
The norther stormed into the
Panhandle Tuesday and by dawn
Wednesday reached the Gulf of
Bru beck To Bring)
His Jazz Quartet
To Campus Feb. 4
The Dave Bnibeck Quartet will
present a two-hour program of
modern jazz, Brubeck style, on
Feb. 4, the first day of classes
in the spring semester.
Sponsored by Town Hall, the
program will be given in G. Rollie
White Coliseum. Tickets will sell
for $2.50, with no seats being re
served. Students will be admitted
with student activity cards.
Featured in the group is Bru
beck at the piano; however, each
member of the quartet has also
won recognition. Appearing with
Brubeck will be Paul Desmond, the
foursome’s alto sajcophone player,
who was recently selected by read
ers of Down Beat magazine as tops
in his field.
Also honored by Down Beat was
the group’s drummer, Joe Morello,
a winner of many honors in his
field. The f ourth, and newest,
member of the group is bass player
Gene Wright. Even before he
joined the Brubeck Quartet in
1958, Wright had gained recogni
tion as an accomplished bass
player.
In 1951 San Francisco’s jazz im
presario Jimmy Lyons introduced
an unknown trio to audiences at
the city’s jazz mecca, the Black-
hawk Club.
Two years later, this Brubeck
group had expanded into a quartet
and had begun to win popularity
polls from such magazines as
Down Beat and Metronome.
Even Time bestowed praise the
following year to Brubeck, when
his picture appeared on the front
cover of the magazine.
In 1958 Bnibeck and company
staged a 70-concert tour of Europe
and Asia, and later teamed with
Leonard Bernstein and the New
York Philharmonic in “Dialogues
for Jazz Combo and Orchestra,”
composed by Howard Brubeck.
Lately Brubeck has recorded
“The Real Ambassadors,” in which
he works with Louis Armstrong,
Carmen McRae and Lambert, Hen
dricks and Ross.
Altogether Bnibeck has pub
lished 21 record albums, and a
large number of pop singles.
Mexico coast in Southeast Texas.
The Weather Bureau said the
powerful winds, which made out
door travel or work extremely un
comfortable, would slacken during
the day Thursday.
Dillon’s death came apparently
after his car ran into a ditch and
he tried to walk home or to shelter
about the time the norther hit.
He started his journey during
Tuesday’s mild temperatures and
was lightly clad.
THE WEATHER Bureau said a
general, slow warmup could be ex
pected toward the end of the week.
This will be only a breather, how
ever, for more frigid air is ex
pected at the beginning of next
week.
Severe as was Texas’ cold, the
Midwest and South were in worse
shape.
A combination of Arctic cold
and impassable roads forced the
closing of thousands of schools
throughout the Midwest, while
heavy snow fell in Ohio and West
ern Pennsylvania.
The South was expected to un
dergo the cold wave, with consid
erable snow, freezing lain and
sleet.
Here’s Spring Semester
Registration Schedule
Cards for spring 1 semester registration will be issued
to returning students at the News Stand in front of Sbisa
Dining Hall according to the following schedule:
Friday, Feb. 1
1-3 p. m.—All whose surnames begin with P, Q, R and S.
3-4:30 p. m.—All whose surnames begin with C, D, E
and F.
Saturday, Feb. 2
8-10 a. m.—All whose surnames begin with G, H, I, J
and K.
10-11:30 a. m.—All whose surnames begin with A and B.
1-3 p. m.—All whose surnames begin with T, U, V, W,
X, Y and Z.
3-4 p. m.—All whose surnames begin with L, M, N and O.
s
NEW GOLD BARS
at Saturday afternoon ceremonies
364 Receive Sheepskins
in Saturday Graduation Rites
Three hundred sixty-four stu
dents received degrees on one of
three levels at January commence
ment exercises Saturday in G. Rol
lie White Coliseum.
Graduating with highest honors
was James Rice Sullivan, a physics
graduate from Culver City, Calif.
High honors went to Lee Feagin
Courtney and Duane Howard Mat
ters, both of Bryan, and Ralph D.
Loyd of Texarkana.
The commencement speaker, Dr.
Robert E. Goodrich Jr. of Dallas,
told the graduates “man must be
ready to change his thinking more
in the next 25 years than in the
past 2,500 years.”
DR. GOODRICH, pastor of the
First Methodist Church in Dallas,
listed four “minimum requirements
for persons living in today’s space
age.”
“First of all and basic,” he said,
“we should be persons with some
sure faith in God at the center of
our life. The form or the fashion
fact of it is essential and we had
better begin with it.”
In addition, the Dallas minister
told the 5,000 parents, faculty and
others that “we ought to be per
sons who are ready to change our
ideas. Only in this way could we
ever keep our wits in this fantastic
age.”
Another of the “minimum re
quirements” mentioned by the Dal
las pastor was “we must be per
sons who are determined to be in
volved in life. We ought to be
more than merely persons who are
caught in the world.”
THE OTHER requirement, Good
rich said, is “we need to be posi
tive persons. The world and es
pecially this nation today needs
persons who are affirmative in
hope and positive in attitude.”
Gonzales, Roberson Suspended
In Theft Of MSC Paintings
Two students charged in the
the theft of four paintings from
the Memorial Student Center last
fall have been suspended from
school, the paintings, worth $500
each, are still missing and pre
sumed to have been destroyed.
Jorge Gonzales, freshman from
Laredo, and William T. Roberson,
sophomore from Wilmington, N.C.,
DAVE BRUBECK
of that faith is not important; the I were suspended after admitting
taking the art works by West Tex
as painter “Cowboy” Kelly.
The two were charged with fel
ony theft before Justice of the
Peace Jess McGee in Bryan.
The students claimed they aban
doned the paintings on the side
walk in front of a North Gate
store when they discovered how
valuable the landscapes were.
Speeches,
Exhibits
On Agenda
A review of America’s space
achievements and future pro
jects will be given by three
prominent speakers during
the Great Issues Committee’s
Space Fiesta here Feb. 6-8.
The event is designed to
show the public the impor-
tancel of space explorations,
according to Bob Wimbish,
chairman of the student com
mittee.
In addition to the speakers, a
dozen firms will send technical ex
hibits and representatives to ex
plain their workings. The displays
will remain in the Memorial Stu
dent Center Feb. 4-22.
FEATURED IN THE exhibits
will be a wide assortment of space
activities, ranging from a pres
surized space suit and a space
communications center to the Man
ned Spacecraft Center to the 990
Astrojet airliner.
The speakers will be:
Dr. Robert R. Gilruth, director
of the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration’s Manned
Spacecraft Center in Houston.
Dr. Herbert Trotter Jr., chair
man of the Board of General Tele
phone and Electronics Laboratoi 1 -
ies Inc., New York, N. Y.
Gifford K. Johnson, president of
Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., Dallas.
Lt. Col. Paul L. Maret, a charter
member of the U. S. Air Force
Ballistic Missile Division, will be
gin the three-day program.
He will narrate two films deal
ing with the Air Force’s role in
the aerospace program. The films
will be shown twice daily Feb. 4-8.
TROTTER, A MEMBER of num
erous advisory groups for the De
fense Department and industrial
firms in addition to his position
with the General Telephone and
Electronics, will speak at 8 p.m.
Feb. 6 in the MSC Ballroom.
. Johnson, who became president
of Ling-TemcO-Vought in 1961, will
discuss “Space: Greatest Adven
ture—Severest Challenge” at 8
p.m. Feb. 7. He previously was
president of Chance Vought.
Gilruth, head of the nation’s
space center presently engaged in
conducting Projects Mercury, Ge
mini and Apollo, will present a
“Progress Report on Our Manned
Spacecraft Center.”
Former Students
Cut Loan Days
Student loans from the Associa
tion of Former Students may be
arranged only on Mondays and
Thursdays next semester, accord
ing to AFS executive secretary
J. B. (Dick) Hervey.
Hervey said that in the past,
three days a week had been set
aside for loans.
Payments on outstanding loans
may be made at any time, how
ever, Hervey added.