The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 07, 1963, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Che Battalion
Tracksters
In Laredo..
See Page 5
’ 1 ai 'd breat;:^,.Volume
■ t points »
■the old on
I -enox n
Told the
’ >n a seasonJ
two.
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1963
Number 77
i u . ip
H
ip'
H
: "" :
Oklahoma Folksingers
|The Nomads, a trio of folksingers from as they perform in Friday night’s Intercol-
Oklahoma State University, are slated to legiate Talent Show. • (See related pictures
ishow their talent at “pickin’ and singing” on Page 3.)
tien
Wire
Review
By The Associated Press
WORLD NEWS
PARIS — The French govern
ment Wednesday night threatened
- new tough measures to end the six-
^ strike of 200,000 coal miners,
'he imposition of coal and gas
rationing loomed.
|The announcement came after
lj|jneeting of President Charles
B Gaulle and his cabinet. It
brought a reaction of bitterness
from union leaders in northern
Prance, where half the coal is
m'ined. They said they are pre
paring for a long strike.
|;trhe government did not specify
the action it would take. A gov-
epiment. spokesman said the mea-
s|res will coincide with a radio-
" television speech in two or three
divs by Premier Georges Pom
pidou. He added that if the situ-
ajhon worsened, De Gaulle himself
may speak.
★ ★ ★
■ UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. —
The United States has served
gBoticc that it would not accept a
Mill this year for more than 32.02
per cent of the total cost of the
#.1*. forces in the Congo and the
lliddle East.
■ U. S. Delegate iFrancis T. P.
Plimpton stated the position
■Vednesday at a private meeting
H|>f a 21-nation committee that
has received five proposals that
rould make the United States
ay more than that.
That is the percentage the
Jnited States pays of the regu
ar U. N. budget.
U. S. NEWS
WASHINGTON — President
Kennedy said Wednesday he is not
Satisfied with the rate at which
Boviet troops are leaving-Cuba. At
Bie same time, he said he has no
Bccurate information on the real
Bxtent of the withdrawal.
I That and other Cuba-related
■opics dominated Kennedy’s morn-
' -p'g news conference.
I Kennedy said that four Ameri
can fliers who died in the 1961
pay of Pigs invasion were serving
pheir country on a voluntary
light. He declined to go further,
paying that “because of the na-
ure of their work it has not been
matter of public record.”
There has been much speculation
kat the four men were employed
y the Central Intelligence Agency.
★ ★ ★
WASHINGTON — Dirk U. Stik-
er, secretary-general of the North
tlantic Treaty Organization, firm-
1 endorsed Wednesday the Ken
edy administration’s proposal that
JATO be provided a nuclear force.
FOR NEXT FALL
Promotions Slated
For 36 On Faculty
Thirty-six facuty members will
assume higher academic rank Sept.
1.
The Board of Directors has con
firmed the promotions. The pro
motions, recommended by depart
ment heads and deans, had the ap-
pi-oval of the Executive Committee
and President Earl Rudder.
FOURTEEN FACULTY mem
bers will become full professors,
They are: Isaac I Peters, dairy
science; G. M. Krise, biology; I. O.
Linger, economics; Paul B. Hen-
sarling, education and psychology;
L. J. Martin and E. E. Stokes,
English; E. G. Breitenkemp and
J. M. Skrivanek, modern languages;
L. S. Kornicker, oceanography
and meteorology; Joe S. Ham, phy
sics; Melvin C. Schroeder, geology;
L. W. Gibbs, veterinary anatomy;
and A. I. Flowers and P. F. Jun-
german, veterinary microbiology.
Promoted from assistant to as
sociate professor are nine faculty
members: Kenneth R. Tefertiller,
agricultural economics and sociolo
gy; William C. Ellis, animal hus
bandry; Frederick A. Gardner,
poultry science; R. M. Hedges,
chemistry; and
DONALD G. BARKER, educa
tion and psychology; J. P. Kroitor,
English; S. M. Ray, oceanography
and meteorology; James H. Mai-sh
III, architecture; and Earl Lo
gan Jr., mechanical engineering.
Thirteen faculty members ad
vanced to the rank of assistant
professor are: Harold W. Franke,
animal husbandry; John W. Brad
ley, poultry science; J. P. Guinn
and O. E. Schatte, English; E. R.
Arango, Peter A. Ford, C. M. Hep-
burn and Neil R. Stout, history
and government; Guy Horton,
journalism; and
David G. Woodcock, architecture;
Paul M. Beckham, mechanical en
gineering; R. G. Greeley, veterin
ary anatomy; and L. H. Carroll,
veterinary microbiology.
Army Reserve Chief
To Be Military Guest
Combat Balt Begins
Weekend Activities
By DAVID MORGAN
Battalion Staff Writer
Lt. Gen. William Henry Sterling Wright, commander of
the U. S. Army’s Reserve Components Office, will be on
campus during Spring Military Day activities.
Gen. Wright and other guests, including Rep. Olin E.
Teague of College Station, will participate in activities which
begin at 9 p. m. Friday with the Combat Ball in Sbisa Hall.
The group will tour the campus Saturday morning, and
at noon Corps Commander Bill Nix of Canadian and his staff
will honor Gen. Wright at a luncheon in the Memorial Student
Center
THE CORPS REVIEW is set for 1:30 p. m. on the main
grounds, followed by an exhibition of precision marching by
the Fish Drill Team.
President and Mrs. Earl
LT. GEN. WRIGHT
Cuban Caves
Hold Weapons
WASHINGTON OP) — The
Army’s top intelligence officer
said Wednesday that Soviet mili
tary supplies, including ammuni
tion, vehicles and aircraft, pro
bably are stored in thousands of
caves in Cuba, but not offensive
missiles or bombers.
Maj. Gen. Alva R. Fitch also
voiced doubt there are any nucle
ar warheads on the island.
Soviet ground force withdrawals
so far appear to be limited to
those associated with the inter
mediate— and medium-range mis
siles removed under U. S. pressure
last October, he added.
Fitch expressed his views at a
dosed hearing of the Senate
Armed Services preparedness sub
committee.
Education Body
Chapter Given
Approval Here
Thirty local men petitioned suc
cessfully for establishment of a
field chapter of Phi Delta Kappa
which has been authorized to ac
cept members in an eight-county
Phi Delta Kappa is the world’s
largest international professional
fraternity for men in education.
The fraternity aims at promotion
and improvement of free public
education through a continuing in
terpretation of the ideals of re
search, service and leadership.
“ESTABLISHMENT OF the
field chapter will give us an op
portunity to recognize leaders in
the field of education and it should
stimulate research and interest in
public school education,” said S.
A. Kerley, president of the Brazos
Valley Phi Delta Kappa Club. He
heads the Counseling and Testing
Center here.
The new field chapter may ac
cept members from Brazos, Bur
leson, Grimes, Madison, Milam,
Robertson, Walker and Washington
counties. Residents of Bryan, Col
lege Station, Brenham, Navasota
and Rockdale are among the char
ter members.
MUCH OF THE CREDIT for
early encouragement and support
of plans to establish a unit here
has been given to Dr. Paul R. Hen-
sarling, head of the Department of
Education and Psychology.
Notice of approval of the peti
tion to establish a field chapter in
this area came from Dr. Clifford
S. Blackburn of Denton, represen
tative of the fraternity. He and
Dr. Maurice F. Shadley of the pro
fessional staff of the fraternity
visited here in December.
Rudder will honor the guests
with a reception and dinner at
2:30 in the Memorial Student
Center ballroom. The final event
is the Military Ball at 9 in Sbisa
Hall.
A 1930 West Point graduate,
Gen. Wright began his career at
Ft. Bliss with the Seventh Calval-
ry. From there he rose in service
to a West Point tactical officer
position to aide to Henry L. Stim-
son, then secretary of war.
HE HELD THIS position until
1944, when he was tranferred to
First Army Headquarters in Eu-
i - ope. He participated in the Nor
mandy landing- and northern Eu
ropean campaign as army pro
vost marshall.
During the Korean conflict Gen.
Wright served on the joint chiefs
of staff as executive officer of the
Joint Subsidiary Plans Division.
OTHER distinguished guests will
be Maj. Gen. and Mrs. W. J. Sut
ton, assistant deputy commanding
general, Reserve Forces, Continent
al Army Command, Ft. Munroe,
Va.; Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Robert
Ti’avis, assistant division command
er, 90th Infantry Division, San An
tonio; and Col. William C. Bindley,
commandant, Air Force ROTC,
Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala.
Others include A&M Former Stu
dents Association President and
Mrs. L. F. Peterson of Fort Worth;
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Cuthrell of
New Orleans, former students as
sociation sponsor of the Ross Vo
lunteer trip to the Mardi Gras; and
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Nix, parents of
the corps commander.
Second Installment
Deadline Announced
Second installment fees are
payable now in the fiscal office.
The deadline for payment with
out penalty is March 12, accord
ing to Allan M. Madeley, assist
ant housing manager. The fee
due is $70.55 with board and
$23.12 without board.
USD A- Official
Plans Talks Here
V.
1
j;;:
1
|
Si ,
Dr. Harold F. Breimeyer, as
sistant to the director in the U.S.
Department of Agriculture’s Agri
cultural Service in Washington,
D.C., will present four marketing
lectures here Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday.
The speaker’s topics will deal
with agricultural marketing and
institutions affecting efficient mar
keting and distribution of goods.
ONE OF BREIMEYER’S talks
will be a graduate school lecture,
“The Changing Institutional Or
ganization of Agriculture,” at 8
p.m. Tuesday in Room 229 of the
Chemistry Building. Questions have
been invited from the audience.
His other three lectures will be
afternoon seminars from 3 to 5
each of the three days in the
Memorial Student Center Social
Room.
Topics are: First day, “The
Market Mysterious Sector of
Economics”; second day, “Market
Order and Chaos, Exploitation and
Equity”; third day, “The Role of
Government Services in Market
ing.”
BREIMEYER SERVED on the
President’s Council of Economic
Advisors from 1959-60. His USD A
service began in 1936, and he re
ceived that agency’s Superior Ser
vice Award in 1954.
Two of his professional jom-nal
articles have won awards. His
contributions in the “Journal of
Farm Economics” are “Hetero
geneity in Agriculture; Impedi
ment to Definition of the Farm
Problem,” “Sources of Our Increas
ing- Food Supply” and “The Three
Economies of Agriculture.”
Breimeyer is a native of Ohio.
He received his BS and MS de
grees from Ohio State University
and the PhD degree from American
University.
DR. H. F. BREIMEYER
A&M Will Be
One Of Stations
Tracking S-66
A&M will be one of the data
receiving stations for the satellite
“S-66” which will be launched this
month by the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration to gather
information about the ionosphere.
Data transmitted by the satellite
will be received by an A&M re
search group headed by Dr. John
P. German, professor of electrical
engineering.
OTHER MEMBERS of the group
are Glenn Gaustad and Wayne F.
Wilson, graduate research assist
ants, who are using the study in
connection with thesis projects.
German said the data will be
collected through special antennas
mounted on top of Bolton Hall
and receiving and recording equip
ment within the building. The
Data Processing Center also will
be used in the work.
Along with A&M, which is par
ticipating through its Texas En
gineering Experiment Station, 54
other institutions are in the S-66
receiving network. Eleven are in
the United States. The other 43
are scattered throughout the world,
with the greatest number in Eu
rope.
GERMAN SAID NASA is seek
ing data for its Faraday rotation
studies (to provide integrated elec
tron content), for scintillation stu
dies (to provide information on
size and shape of ionospheric ir
regularities) and Doppler studies
(to provide orbital as well as elec
tron content information).
The A&M group has already been
receiving data from many of the
approximately 200 satellites now
in orbit, German said. It has thus
been able to adapt and improve its
equipment for top effectiveness in
the S-66 study program.
Pentagon Changes Plans
For High School ROTC
WASHINGTON LT*)—The Pentagon, in the face of buzz-
saw opposition in Congress, abandoned Wednesday its plan
to abolish the high school Reserve Officers Training Corps
and indicated instead proposals to expand it are acceptable.
Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara had sought
approval from Congress to end support of the program effec
tive July 1.
An Assistant Secretary told a House subcommittee of
the shift in position after a hint that a fight over junior
ROTC could spell trouble for the proposed overhaul of the
college ROTC.
Subcommittee Chairman F. Edward Hebert, D-La., who
had opposed the cutback since it was first suggested, said
it was “sudden, cynical and short-sighted.” Since the program
is almost 50 years old, he said, “the Army is indeed remark
ably slow in becoming aware of its mistakes.”
UNIVERSITY 9 AGREED ESSENTIAL
Students Give Varied Views
On Name - Change Proposal
BY KENT JOHNSTON
Battalion Staff Writer
Most Aggies interviewed this
week about A&M’s name change
were in favor of calling the
school a university.
Out of 50 students polled, 78
per cent favored adopting a
name for A&M which would in
clude the word university.
TVelve per cent opposed the
name change and ten per cent
were apathetic or undecided.
“Texas A&M University” was
the name preferred by 58 per
cent of the Aggies, and “Texas
State University and the Agri-
cultural and Mechanical College”
was the name wanted by 20 per
cent. Twelve per cent had no
preference.
Many of the students polled
gave enthusiastic opinions about
a question raised by Sen. W. T.
Moore of Bryan, a veteran legis
lator and an Aggie ex who was
graduated in 1940.
Moore called the proposed
adoption of the name “Texas
A&M University,” with A & M
used as initials only, “a serious
mistake.” He favors “Texas
State University and the Agri
cultural and Mechanical Col
lege,” a name style used by most
land grant universities.
Several students agreed with
Moore.
Harold Maxwell, an Albany
senior majoring in industrial
distribution, said :
“My opinion is the same as
Moore’s. A&M should be called
Texas State University and the
Agricultural and Mechanical Col
lege because of the names used
by other land grant universi
ties.”
James Carter, junior veteri
nary student from Shreveport,
La., said:
“I favor the name Texas State
University and the Agricultural
and Mechanical College because
it shows that A&M is a land
grant institution, and it more
adequately describes the school.
“Not only is A&M a univer
sity, but it specializes in the
agricultural and mechanical
fields.”
Some of Moore’s opposition
feel that the identity of A&M
would be lost if the school were
called Texas State University.
Others pointed out the similarity
between Texas University and
(See NAME-CHANGE On Page 4)