Practice I* ;ACK MAI >o. African e fish IkI e African ( 'd black a li arbor k® hooked 451 our Directors Favor Name-Change; ssue Will Be Discussed Saturday Che Battalion I Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1963 Number 69 y ale lants graduate Enrollment Reaches High )tony maisi: ScICIICC >erk up vi ArCSS StlOW »Doz tableti ,7/T J vhile driviisB lying, do air rove Uboialm IBis Increase \W* L1Q e Spring; semester enrollment for H graduate school has set an UiVI record and is an increase of nore than twenty-eight per cent jvcr last year at this time. Hhe announcement Wednesday, :ami‘ from Dean of Graduate Stud- i es Wayne C. Hall, who listed total .'nrpllment in the graduate school it |r>G as compared to 747 enrolled n the spring of 19(12. ; A AM in the fall semester re- . ferjted the greatest percentage gain n graduate school enrollment of my college or university in thirteen ; Soiithern states. Fall semester graduate enroll- ||§ neht totaled 956 students, and 68 rf khese received degrees at the January commencement. “Advanced degrees have been a- Waided to 278 students during the last 12 months,” Hall said. “[More students are becoming in terested in graduate education as ihey realize the bachelor’s degree :3 only a beginning, like the high ichool diploma was 20 years ago,” :he dean continued. ■ Approximately 60 per cent of the graduate students are master’s iBree candidates and the others seek doctoral degrees. HA&M’s growing reputation as Krraduate studies center is re- Mcted by the geographical spread fepresented in the student body. Graduate students come from about three-fourths of the states and al most 40 countries around the World,” Hall pointed out. IfA rapid increase in enrollment graduate studies in the arts and sciences has brought the school almost equal with engineering and feiculture in number of students enrolled. : |A number of new graduate pro- Ikms have been established in re lent months, but the older pro grams still attract the most stu dents. Among the new programs are master’s degrees in English, history, government, statistics, computer science and laboratory animal medicine. I me <-• w - wmmam M— IN' * i i : ' "III! iiiiliiii 'e' < ® 'Vi'?-'*' YV Y - J Open Sessions To Bear Name Discussion Students will once again have an opportunity to be heard on the question of a name change for A&M. The Student Senate will open the floor - at its meeting tonight to discussion on such a change, ac cording to student body president Sheldon Best. He said that every student is invited “and even en couraged’’ to attend the meeting and voice an opinion. BEST SAID the open discussion is an attempt to survey the cur- (See editorial “Student Body Call ed On . . .” on Page 2.) Warm Interlude With spring-like skies overhead yesterday is moving in, according to the weather man, these Consolidated High School girls decided and by tomorrow this scene will be a me- to take in a bit of tennis. But a cold front mory. rent attitude of the student body regarding a name change. He said: “The senate is interested in find ing out if the general feeling on campus is the same as it was last spring.” In an informal poll conducted last May 9, in which 48.2 per cent of the student body voted, a name change was favored. In answer to the question: THE COLLEGE administration called for the informal poll last spring. Two other questions, con cerning compulsory corps and co education, were also voted on in the poll. The Thursday night session is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. rn Room 3-D of the Memorial Stu dent Center. AT A&M METHODIST CHURCH TONIGHT Four-Man Panel To Close RE Week A joint discussion panel of speakers representing the ideas of different religious denominations will conclude Religious Emphasis Week activities at the A&M Meth odist Church at 7:15 tonight. Wire Review By The Associated Press WORLD NEWS SAIGON, South Viet Nam — Government forces took revenge Hednesday on a crack Commu- nlst battalion believed to be the ojie that mauled their troops Jan. 2|in the bloodist single battle of tie Vietnamese war. ■In day-long blistering air strikes ppd ground attacks, government Ri’ces claimed 50 guerrillas were killed near Bac Lieu, 120 miles ipnthwest of Saigon. Fighters and armed escort heli- (pters caught several large con- eentrations of Viet Cong in dry open rice fields and pounded them With rockets. U. S. NEWS I KEY WEST, Fla. — Two B*fe jackets stenciled “Sulphur ^ueen” were found Wednesday in he Atlantic, indicating that a p23-foot tanker which disappear- M Feb. 2 with 39 men aboard nay have met disaster at sea. The jackets and other debris were believed to be from the tanker Marine Sulphur Queen. One of the jackets was located iy a Navy torpedo retriever vessel and the second was pick ed up by a Coast Guard patrol vessel. ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON — President Kennedy pledged full support to Venezuela on Wednesday in resist ing the “all-out campaign of inter national Communists, aided especi ally by their Cuban allies,” to over throw President Romulo Betan court's government. Kennedy’s pledge of U. S. sup port was announced in a com munique marking the windup of Betancourt’s official two-day visit to Washington. ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON — The While House looked to the Eisenhower administration for precedent, then made it final Wednesday: Reporters may no longer mingle or talk to guests at official presi dential receptions. TEXAS NEWS AUSTIN — Texas senators spent Wednesday huddled in tense, behind-the-scenes strategy conferences following the secret session rejection of W. St. John Garwood as a University of Texas regent. Thursday, senators go into an other secret session where several senators say privately that the issue may cause one of the most rough-and-tumble battles in years. Garwood, former State Supreme Court justice, was among Gov. John Connally’s first major ap pointments. Participating on the panel will be: Dr. Samuel I. Goltermann, presi dent of Concordia Junior College at Austin, representing the Luther an faith. Dr. Das Kelly Barnett, Vicar of St. John’s Episcopal Church at Palacios, speaking for Methodist, Presbyterian, Episcopalian and Christian students. RABBI Louis Firestein, from the Temple Berth Israel of Austin, sponsored by the B’nai B’rith Hil- lel Foundation. The M. C. Deason, Pastor of Sacred Heart Church of Austin, speaking for the Catholic faith. The four men spoke before smal ler individual groups eai’lier this week in accordance with a new system of presenting the religious J emphasis program, used for the first time this year. LAST NIGHT, students at the First Baptist Church heard Dr. Robert A. Hingson speak on the importance of an integrated at tack by specialists in agriculture, education and medicine in the solution of the world’s problems. In his talk, Hingson, professor of anesthesia at Western Reserve University School of Medicine, used the theme “Be ye doers of the Word and not hearers only.” Barnett spoke at the A&M Meth odist Church last night on “Rad ical Monotheism.” He emphasized the importance of one God who is a God above Gods. The ultimate tragedy of the world is not bad breath or havin the right kind of grease on your hair to attract girls, he said. “The ultimate tragedy is to lose God.” CONCLUDING his lectures be fore Lutheran students, Golter mann said, “It’s time for people to stand up on their hind legs and say why thy’re doing what they’re doing about their Christian way of life.” Catholic students attended a special mass last night in which the altar faced the , congregation. The Church of Christ Bible Chair was the scene of the next-to-last talk by McCurrin Harwell, pastor of the Central Church of Christ in Temple. Firesteifi spoke before Jewish students last night at the Hillel Foundation. Levin To Discuss Cultures In Conflict Tonight In Biological Sciences Building Harry Levin, professor of com parative literature at Harvard University, will speak on “Cultui’es in Conflict: Some Literary and Education Implications of the Snow-Leavis Controversy” tonight at 8 in the Biological Sciences Lec ture Room. His topic comes from a debate between a British scientist and a Cambridge literary critic as to whether a new culture based upon the sciences is replacing the long- existing culture centered upon the humanities. The lecturer holds honorary doc torates from Syracuse University and St. Andrews University, and is a recognized critic, scholar and teacher. Levin has taught in California, Paris, Salzburg and Tokyo, as well as at Hai'vard. He has written four books and some 70 articles on literature and has edited texts of such famous authors as Shakespeare and Haw thorne. Ag Aviators To Fly Here A&M will hold its 12th annual Agricultural Aviation Conference early next week to show the lat est development in the business of aerial application of farm chemi cals and seed. Special attractions are flight de monstrations of planes and equip ment, and an air show. PROGRAM CHAIRMAN Joe Brusse of the Department of Aero space Engineering said activities will start at noon Sunday with re gistration in the Memorial Stu dent Center. Flight demonstrations and air show will start at 3:30 p.m. Mon day at Easterwood Airport, wea ther permitting. Brusse said the air show will feature Frank Price of Waco, presi- ent of the American Tiger Club, performing acrobatics in his famed Jungmeister biplane. A BANQUET IS set at 7 p.m. Monday in the MSC. Guest speak er will be humorist Bob Murphy of Nacogdoches. The conference is sponsoi - ed by the A&M College System in co operation with the Texas Aero nautics Commission, Texas Flying Farmers and Ranchers Association and the Texas Aerial Applicators Association. Yeteran . Members Want ‘University" In A&M’s Name BY ALAN PAYNE Four of the six hold-over members of the A&M System Board of Directors told The Battalion this week that they favor a College name-change to incorporate the word “univer sity.” In telephone interviews with the six veteran directors, the other two declined to comment. All three of the newly- appointed members said they were not familiar enough with the issue to have a definite opinion. Meanwhile Chancellor M. T. Harrington confirmed that the name-change question will definitely be discussed at a regular meeting of the directors here this weekend. Harrington indicated that nothing more than a discus sion of the question is planned and that no particular new name has been decided upon by the directors. He added that no faculty or administration recommendation on a name- change has been received since last fall when the Century Council advocated a change to make A&M a university. Directors saying they are in favor of a change were Sterling C. Evans of Houston. H. C. Heldenfels of Corpus Christi, Clyde Thompson of Diboll and John C. Newton of Beaumont. Newspaper publisher S. B. Whittenburg of Am arillo refused to make any comment on the question, while Clyde H. Wells of Granbury said he would prefer that the directors show their feelings as a group. All six of these men were members of the board that asked the legislature in 1961 to change the college’s name to Texas State University and Agricultural and Mechanical Col lege. Haines Expects Request From Board Rep. David Haines of Bryan told The Battalion last week he expects another name-change reouest from the board this year. The freshman legislator added that he believes the directors will favor the name Texas A&M University, with A&M standing as a word and not as initials for “Agricultural and Mechanical.” Haines made his comments after a “joke” effort to enact a name-change was over-ruled in the House last week. The proposed amendment, which Haines called “a simple attempt to needle me,” would have changed the school’s name to The University of Texas Agricultural and Mechanical Branch at College Station. Most outspoken of the six hold-over directors was Thomp son, a lumber executive from Diholl who favors Texas State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College as a new name. “We know' that A&M is a university and are going to have to get the word “university” into the name,” Thomp son said. “We have seen several cases where the name “col lege” was a hindrance, especially in the hiring of prospective new professors who don’t want to leave a university to join a coPege.” Thompson emphasized the 1961 board decision to seek a new name and said he would favor similar action again this year. “We already have plenty of colleges in the A&M System, why not have a university?” he quipped. Newton Favors Texas State University Newton, who served as vice president of the board dur ing the last two years, said he did not want an “exaggerated name,” but favored Texas State University and the Agricul tural and Mechanical College. He pointed out that LSU and several other land-grant schools have similar names. Newton is one of five former A&M students serving on the board. Evans, a rancher and another former student, said he favored a change and “the board has reached a definite agreement on a name-change.” He referred questions on the “agreement” to Harrington, who said he knew of no such board action. Heldenfels, a Corpus Christi contractor and former stu dent, said he favored a change because the Century Council had advocated such a move. “The Century Council recommended a change and I’m sure the board will try to follow the council’s recommenda tion,” he said. Each of the three newly-appointed directors said the name-change issues had been discussed during Senate con firmation hearings, but that was the only contact they had had with the question. Symonds Like Fish-Seen, Not Heard One new director, Gardiner Symonds of Houston, said he w*as so unfamiliar with the problem that “I just had to tell the senators that I wasn’t familiar enough with the question to have any ideas at all.” Symonds, chairman of the board of Tennessee Gas Trans mission Co., added, “I’m just like a freshman—to be seen and not heard. I’ll have to do a lot of studying before I can ex press myself on the question.” Probably most familiar with the issue was L. F. Peter son. from Fort Worth who also serves as president of the Association of Former Students. Peterson did not wish to relate any personal feelings but said he felt former students would accept a change “graciously.” “I haven’t heard a word of objection from a former student.” he said. He added that he hadn’t heard any opinion of any kind from Aggie-exes. The third new appointee. Dr. A. P. Beutel of Lake Jack- son, also said he wasn’t familiar enough with the issue to have an opinion. “Even though the question came up during my session with the Senate, no one else has said anything to me about a name-change.” Beutel said. “I’m afraid I’d have to defer my answer right now. I will have to give the problem a lot of study before I form an opinion.” Beutel, an official for Dow Chemical Co., added that he knew every little about any phase of A&M and “will have a lot to learn in the next few months.”