ie White Colij SCHEDULE 'AND 1963 and Jr’s tol 6 tO folk; klmno l PQES 6 TUVWXH Che Battalion Lenox Leads Aggies... See Page 4 Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1963 Number 64 :a®i. STmI Governor’s Bill ogs At End f Honeymoon AUSTIN (/P)—Gov. John Connally’s plans to study ’i - - higher education yot into trouble in the Texas House Tues- A’ ,} a y as members of a subcommittee argued over who should .ii«n e the members to the proposed 25-man committee. Several members of the House State Affairs committee & 0MI ani other House members, who asked not to be quoted by said “the honeymoon is over “The governor doesn’t know it but he has hit the first ,y', A'jBky road of his administration.” said one member. I SENATE ACTION on its version of the bill to let Con- 'f-M Upfly name a 25-man committee to study higher education could come this week. ^4. Gov. Preston Smith said 4 " ie is ready to let Sen. Walter : ISHER , 1963 Richter, Gonzales, ask for a suspension of the rules to |)riny up the proposal, but the ■troversial measure which pro- /ides for the turaing over of Padre i|ad seashore areas to the Fed- ■ral government has the first :hatice at Senate debate when it l»in goes into session. House members said that a sub- 'opimittee studying the measure Wits to amend the bill to let stomally name five members, the iouse speaker five members and ■ lieutenant governor five mem- . Ms. The original bill called for ^officerctwfnnally to name all 25 members, rnia, will bringM KTHE GOVERNOR won’t give inch,”'said a House member, knnounc.mfninc.3!* : 'He wants whole hog or none.” Rep. David Crews, Conroe, and tep. Gene Fondren, Taylor, said hope to work out the differ- - mces and win committee support iext week. wThe latest word today is that lie governor is trying to get the lerate to pass the bill the way ie wants it and then hold that >ver the heads of the House,” a limber said. “That’s not going » do him any good. We’re just Whard-headed as he is.” iSmith recessed the Senate until 10:30 a.m. Wednesday after a $0ruin of 21 failed to appear. Inter-Council Group Plans For Visitors The Inter-Council committee held its organizational meeting Tuesday and named David Coleman of Ver non as chairman. Coleman, with the assistance of S. A. Kerley, Director of the Coun seling and Testing Center, assigned responsibilities for administering All-College Day and High School Career Day at the meeting. Committee members given jobs were Jack Myer, who will direct registration; Bob Carter, xvho will handle publicity; and Hugh Magers and George McWilliams, who wall be in charge of housing and feeding of the weekend guests. All-College Day is scheduled March 15 with High School Career Day set for March 16. Kerley is coordinating this effort through the Counseling and Testing Center and the Inter-Council com mittee. Several members of the college faculty and staff are advising stu dents of the committee. i,r . ^ ■vv v; Be My Valentine Sarah Carter, Memorial Student Center em- Greeting - card counters in the College Sta- ploye, assists Richard Watson, Squadron 5 tion area have been crowded by Aggies set freshman from Yuma, Arizona, in selecting on observing the traditional Valentine’s a valentine card for a special someone. Day. TICKETS ON SALE Freshman Ball Promises Weekend Of Dates, Dance N 'A Wire Review By The Associated Press WORLD NEWS LONDON — Prime Minister gold Macmillan’s government ned back an opposition assault esday night and won parlia- ntary approval of the emergen-: economic program he drew up Beause France blocked Britain’s ■try into the European Common mrket. ■At the end of a two-day debate the House of Commons, Mac- ■Uan’s Conservatives defeated a Bborite motion of no confidence, ■3-227, and went on to win sup- ■it of his program, 330-227. A A A ROME — The United States *as reported Tuesday night en- untering political problems in tiding a Polaris submarine base Spain or Italy. But an American source said Washington is going ahead with jilans to station three Polaris *ubs in the Mediterranean start- ng April 1. . U. S. NEWS IMIAMI, Fla.—A Miami to Chi-, ko jet airliner carrying 43 per- tns crashed and burned Tuesday In south Florida’s Everglades wil- Bmess shortly after takeoff in B vicious squall. ■ The Coast Guard reported all [poard apparently were killed. ■ “The fuselage is busted up,” fcid Lt. Cmdi\ James Dillon, one pf two helicopter pilots who found Pd explored the wreck. “It’s been Imsumed by fire. Badly burned— pitted.’’ TEXAS NEWS HOUSTON — The orbital flight astronaut LeRoy Gordon Coop- |r Jr. has been rescheduled for nid-May, the Manned Spacecraft tenter announced Tuesday. The new target date was set liter a decision was made to re tire the flight control system of iooper’s MA-9 booster rocket, a pace center spokesman said. Five Beauties To Be Selected Band Finalists Five finalists for Band Sweet heart will be selected this week from 25 nominations. One of the five finalists will be selected Sweet heart at the annual Band Dance, Saturday, Feb. 23. The Aggieland Combo will fur nish music for the 9 p.m. ball in Sbisa Dining Hall. Committee chairman for the dance will be Don Willis, decor*a- tions; Ronnie Moon, sweetheart; David Karrer, finance; Henry Pot ter, program and invitations; and Bill Barnhart, coordination. Honored guests will be deans, military officers, the chancellor, president and commandant and several faculty members. County Residents Donate $7,600 To MOD Drive Brazos County residents chipped in $7,600 during the 1963 March of Dimes campaign, C. E. Sand- stedt, county MOD chairman, re ported Tuesday. The figure is virtually the same as last year, Sandstedt said. “Actually our current collection is less than $100 of the total collected in 1962, and some donations are still being received. The retired A&M professor said he was “extremely pleased” with the 1963 drive. Of the total collected, 25 per cent will go directly to research, 37.5 per cent will be sent to the national foundation and 37.5 per cent will be retained with the local MOD chapter. Some of the collection sent the national foundation, Sandstedt ad ded, will be returned to Texas for research and treatment. Finalists have been selected for Freshman Sweetheart and will be presented at the Freshman Ball Saturday night in Sbisa Hall. The four girls vying for the honor are Ginger Lewis of Kings ville, Peggy Griffith of Cleburne, Joyce Ann Haley of Beaumont and Betty Greene of Deming, N. M. According to Bill Hite, assistant student programs’ dh-ector, the sweetheart will he presented at about 9:45 p.m. during the ball. WELL OVER 100 tickets had been sold to the event by Tuesday afternoon, and Freshman Class President Bill Millikin predicted a large tumout for Saturday’s af fair. Millikin also said that several prominent guests will be present, including Lynn Parks, reigning Aggie Sweetheart. She will be es corted by Kirby Warren of Fort Worth, an A-3 freshman. Prominent college figures who will be present are President and Mrs. Earl Rudder, Dean and Mrs. J. P. Hannigan, Chancellor and Mrs. M. T. Harrington, Mr. and Mrs. Benny Zinn, Mr. and Mrs. J. Gordon Gay and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hite. Col. and Mrs. Joe E. Davis, Col. and Mrs. James F. Starkey, Col. Three Biology Profs To Write Lab Manuel Three members of the Depart ment of Biology have signed a contract with Macmillan Company to write a laboratory manual in general biology. They are Dr. L. S. Dillon, pro fessor, and Walter V. Robertson and John L. Mural, instructors. The proposed text will empha size experimental procedures relat ed to modern biological concepts. Dillon is a recognized authority on systematic zoology and evolu tion. In 1961 he published a 896- page book, “A Manual of Common Beetles of Eastern North Ameri ca,” which is now considered a classic in this field. The scientist is currently pre paring manuscripts for two general biology books to be published in the spring by the Macmillan Com pany. Robertson specializes in verte brate zoology and Murad in para sitology. and Mrs. Frank Elder, Col. and Mrs. Frank Vaden Jr. and Lt. Col. and Mrs. Edward V. Adams. IN ADDITION to this group the deans of the various schools will be honored guests. The Aggieland Orchestra will present music for the evening’s entertainrpent which begins at 9 p.m. A professional photographer will be on hand to take pictures of the first-year Aggies and their dates. The 8x10 enlargements will sell for one dollar each. No advance picture sale has been planned. Early B. Denison, freshman so cial secretary, said that tickets would remain on sale through Sat urday and can be purchased at the door Saturday night. Advance sales began Monday. Tickets are being sold for $3 per couple and can be purchased at the cashier’s window in the lower level of the MSC. CORSAGES WILL be sold dur ing the week by the dorm repre sentatives of the Student Floral Concessions. Dress to the annual event is formal. Freshman President Mil likin said girls can wear either long or short formals, while the Aggies will wear white shirts with black bow ties. Corps students will be dressed in Class A winter uniform with white shirts and black bow ties. ITS Auditions To Test Acts This Weekend Six members of the Intercollegiate Talent Show’s audi tion committee will make a second flying tour of southern universities this weekend in search of top talent for the show. Wayne Stark, Memorial Student Center director, said Tuesday that the group will audition talent at Baton Rouge, La., (Louisiana. State College). New Orleans, La., (Tulane and Loyola), Fayetteville, Ark., (University of Arkansas) and Weatherford, Okla., (Southwestern State College.) Last week the committee auditioned talent at Fort Worth (TCU) and Oklahoma City (Oklahoma State Univer sity). While at Fort Worth, the group watched several acts from Texas Tech. SO FAR, THEY have watched approximately 30 qcts from Baylor University, Texas University and South western University of George town, including those seen during last week’s tour. Before auditioning is over, the "ommittep will have seen more than 100 acts. From these the group will choose 10 or 11 of the best acts for the talent show, which will be held March 8. Members of the audition com mittee making this weekend’s tour will be Bob Boone, advisor; Eddie Duncan, committee chairman; Mike Use, John Brainerd and two other students. LAST WEEK’S tour was made by Duncan, Use, Brainerd and Bill Hite, committee advisor. The 12th Annual Intercollegiate Talent Show will be held in G. Rollie White Coliseum. It will present 10 or 11 acts from 18 col leges from four states and is the largest intercollegiate talent show in the United States, according to Stark. Following the talent show there will be a dance in the MSC ball room, featuring thi’ee or four of the acts. Razorbacks Badger Aggies Some loyal Arkansas fan just could not resist the temptation. Recently the 1962 Directory of Former Students was sent out all over the world. The directories were mailed and published in Camden, Ark., 190 air miles from Fayette ville. Located on many packages on a postage-meter sticker was a running hog with the slogan “Go Hogs, Go”. The “error” was first spotted by Lewis E. Bracy Jr., ’45, of the Capital National Bank in Austin. Bracy, in a letter to J. B. (Dick) Hervey, executive secretary of the Association of Former Students, said he was having enough trouble fighting’ the battle for A&M in the Capital City without adding more worries. Not all copies had the “pig” stamped on the package, but somehow the bulk of the ones that were stamped were sent to Austin. Scholarships For Students Total $10,000 More than $10,000 in scholarships and tuition grants will be awarded to students this spring by . the Faculty Scholarships Committee, according to Dean W. J. Graff, committee chairman. During the next 30 days cash awards totaling $10,000 will be awarded to qualified students for use during the 1963-64 school year. Qualified students have been en couraged to apply for these awards at an early date, Graff said. Graff also announced the avail ability of a limited number of tuition scholarships in the form of refunds for the additional $25 which was added to the matricula tion fee under terms of a bill which was passed by the Texas Legisla ture in 1957. To qualify for the refunds stu dents must show that the added tuition created a serious financial hardship for them. Applicants must have completed at least one semester at A&M with an overall grade point average of 1.00 and must be legal residents of Texas. Applications blanks for schol arships and refunds are now avail able in the Registrar’s Office and must be completed on or before March 15 with the secretary of the Faculty Scholarships Committee, Abilene High Choir To Sing In Guion The 60-voice Abilene High Scrool choir will present a concert at 8 p.m. Friday in Guion Hall. Carl Best, former choir director at the First Baptist Crurch in Bryan, has charge of the Abilene group. A&M Consolidated students are providing housing and meals for the visitors. The choir’s appearance in College Station is part of an annual concert tour. No admission will be charged. UNDER NEW PROGRAM Speakers Offer Varied Backgrounds (Editor’s note: This is the first of a series of three articles devot ed to off-campus Religious Em phasis Week speakers. The Batta lion will present two of the six guest speakers in each issue dur ing the remainder of the week.) Under a new system of present- ,' ' - ^ V- «4i MCMURRIN HARRELL the Religious Emphasis program this year, students and the public will be invited to attend the serv- ives of their choice. Representing the Presbyterian, Methodist, Episcopalian and Christ ian Church groups will be Dr. Das Kelly Barnett, Vicar of St. John’s Episcopal Church, of Palacios, and Christ Church, of Matagorda. The joint meeting of the four denomina tions will be held at the A&M Methodist Church. SPEAKER FOR the Church of Christ meetings will be McCurrin Harrell, minister of the Central Church of Christ of Temple. The meetings will be held in the Blue bonnet Room of the Church of Christ Bible Chair. Barnett, before coming to his pi-esent position, was professor of Christian Social Ethics at the Episcopal Theological Seminary of the Southwest in Austin. During his career he has also served as an acting professor of religion, professor of sociology, a newspaper columnist, lecturer and writer. A graduate of Hardin Simmons University, Barnett received his ThM in 1941 and in 1943 his ThD from the Southern Baptist Theo logical Seminary. He also holds a MA degree from Yale University. The churchman was one of the speakers and participants in the World Conference on Religion and Freedom, held in Dallas in the spring of 1959. He was also one of “60 Most Outstanding Texans” invited to the Uhiversity of Texas —sponsored regional assembly of the American Assembly. SPEAKING ON the general theme “Faith in the Twentieth Century,” Barnett will talk Mon day, Tuesday and Wednesday at 7:15 p.m. On Thursday night he will participate as a member of a special Religious Emphasis Week panel. Harwell, born in Ellis County on Feb. 16, 1928, attended Navarro Junior College and Abilene Christ ian College. He began preaching while in high school serving several congregations including churches in Dawson and Italy. In the spring of 1952 he began doing full time work and since that time has served churches in Bur net, Centerville and Rockdale. He is the father of three daughters, ages 8, 11 and 13, and is married to the former Frances Crockett. Harwell will speak each even ing Monday thru Thursday at 7:10 p.m. Discussion periods will fol low the talks. DR. DAS KELLY BARNETT