"\ >NEK rays ffi t >wdown 7 ou Get da Done t PUS VERS Che Battalion Grid Signees Total 45 , e. See Page 4 ID Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1963 Number 80 Museum Doors Shut 1959 State n i iTfiiffii )USE iC steaks. P WANTED :infl checker. Midi Must be herd! uj Be 21. Phone W« LP WANTED Career Day ans Continue; »oms Needed Final plans for Hi^h School reer Day, which will draw estimated 1,000 young men campus Friday and Satur- l are being completed al- igh rooms are still needed se the weekend guests, 'ommitments are needed for 175 to 200 additional rooms, xiording- to George McWilliams —■ I Hugh Magers, co-chairmen of Inter-Council housing commit- ■xpevience not ft. Apply nt 3tB ^curate, home-i ity ord, scored. , Testinfi Mi* ID I. Calif. » NOTICES at be brought, M® 1 !to ions”'*Ground* ^ Rudder, itmr* 8-12. l-Ji ^ .ay) at or Wort® of the day pr««f r of Student PuUl* nev exam forphji- i8 “i '41 wrifi perm' cy Examination : of Journalii® it ch IB, at 3 P. io-Hi-Fi i Repair )IO & TV 2403 S. Colk? 1 eadquarters r Texas & Models -Bank Rales TOR CO: eith Ford as Are. LITERS es-Servic« ms ors For: 3 Victor tors & [achines ES ter co. TA 2-6° ( ICE r ji. ,4 ■. “H'HILE NOT all the rooms of- use may have a visitor ifted to them, it is necessary (these rooms are available if l jjjjistration for Career Day will at 1 p.m. Friday in the 1 sorial Student Center and will ®ue through 9:45 Saturday Bing. ftlcoming the high school visi- the campus will be President who will speak to pneral assembly of the students Guion Hall. FOLLOWING THE assembly, s4 students will be broken down groups according to their * lemic fields of interest. They then move to their respective and departments for the ® Uf the morning’s activities, high school students will be to lunch in the college dining h by members of the school leils. LOCKED DOOR students denied exhibits Sweetheart Finalists Told For Soph Ball iiturday afternoon the prospec- ! Aggies are scheduled to tour tfe facilities. Each group of fats will visit three depart- within their academic school, far Day activities are scheduled •did at 4 p.m. Saturday after- Five finalists have been selected as sweetheart candidates for the annual Sophomore Ball to be held Saturday night in Sbisa Dining Hall. Chosen weme Paula Ann Moore of Groves, dscorted by Russell Ric hard; Carolyn Rowe of Austin, es corted by David Fox; Gayla Lor raine Schwarting of Bellaire, es- Wire Review Bryan, By The Associated Press WORLD NEWS DNICH, Germany — After a bur debate on terms, former faer Georges Bidault of France Tuesday night to seek po- asylum in West Germany, faian authorities announced. It Bed certain to be granted. Fiiault went to the Bavarian In- pr Ministry, apparently to file 1 request for asylum, after a t? session at Munich’s police Quarters. Die conditions under which Bi- ilt would be given asylum were i disclosed immediately. But Hement apparently was reached kis long session at police head- aters. U. S. NEWS Washington — a House faed Services subcommittee proved Tuesday legislation Anting the services a $1.5-bil- * yearly pay raise, $278 mil 's more than the administra- recommended. fop. Carl Vinson, D-Ga., chair- '•n of the full committee, ex- 'Bwd approval of the plan and fled an executive session for Niy to discuss it. foe bill ties future military dement allowances to the cost f firing, provides an $87-million in retirement pay, and 'lies several principal increas- 'tter what the defense depart- proposed. Die subcommittee proposed a ^•billion boost in basic pay pranging from $1.80 a '‘fa for recruits and $120 a l fah for top noncommissioned ^ters to $57.30 for second lieu- Nrita and $125 for high-rank- ‘l officers. •kirk Washington - a majority report of Congress’s Joint Eco no m i c Committee recommended Tuesday that any tax cut this year be bigger than President Kennedy had proposed. So did the Republican minority report. But congressional uncertainty about weather, and how much, to cut taxes and revise them was mir rored in the many-sided 108-page report. TEXAS NEWS AUSTIN — A Senate commit tee killed a proposal Tuesday to require all legislative proceedings to be opened to the public. The proposed constitutional amendment, killed by a 9-6 vote, was sponsored by Sen. A. R. Schwartz of Galveston. Schwartz introduced the measure shortly be fore the Senate in secret session rejected the governor’s nomina tion of former State Supreme Court Justice W. St. John G'ar- Wood as a University of Texas regent. Most of the lawmakers’ proceed ings are open now, except for some House and Senate Investigating Committee meetings, the Senate Nominating Committee hearings, and Senate debate and votes on governors’ appointments. ★★★ FORT WORTH—A Baptist min ister said Tuesday widespread so cial drinking exists among church congregations and he declared that some changes are in order. “Our old answers, attitudes and actions obvious are not getting the job done,” said Donald L. An derson, pastor of the First Bap tist Church in Kingsville. “We need to change our ap proach in dealing with the social drinker.” corted by Leonard Barker; Linda Wheeler of Pueblo, Colo., escorted by Francis Callahan; and Sharron Ann Sibley of Austin, escorted by Marion Pugh. Theme for the ball will be “A Spring Nite,” with Russell Jack son’s orchestra from Houston fur nishing dance music. Tickets are on sale at the cash ier’s desk of the Memorial Student Center at $3.50 a couple. Tickets will go off sale Friday at 4 p.m., but they will be available at the door Satui’day night. Committee chairman for the af fair are James Love, decoration; Jim Burns, ticket sales; and Bill Altman, programs. Play’s Closing Not Censorship Says Baylor FORT WORTH (^) — Baylor University declared Tuesday it did not consider the controversial clos ing of the Eugene O’Neill play an act of censorship. The action by Baylor President Abner McCall led to the resigna tion Friday of Paul Baker, chair man of the drama department, his wife and 11 members of his staff. IN A STATEMENT issued Tues day the university said a long standing policy against permitting ridicule of the Christian religion in any campus media was a key issue in the dispute between the administration and the Baylor theater. The statement was prepared for presentation at a workshop spon sored by the Christian Life Com mission of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. DAVID A. CHEAVENS, director of public relations at Baylor, read the statement during a discussion period at the Southwestern Bap tist Theological Seminary. The Baylor official read the statement, authorized by Dr. Mc Call, after a paper entitled “Cen- sorship-right or wrong” was de livered by T. B. Mason, professor of Christian ethics at the sem inary. College May Lose Entire Col lection BY DAN LOUIS JR. Battalion News Editor A state law passed in 1959 has closed the doors of the College’s museum. The same law which says no college can maintain a museum with state funds, stand a good chance of causing the College to lose the exhibits in the museum. Dr. W. B. Davis, head of the Department of Wildlife Manage ment and chairman of a museum committee, said there is no money available to run the museum. He pointed out that the museum doors were locked when the De partment of Range and Forestry moved into the new Plant Sciences Building. UNTIL THAT TIME some mem bers of the department were of- ficed in the building and kept the museum open. Davis said that since the move in late January there has been no one located in the building. At present all the exhibits, with the exception of a herbarium, remain in the building. The herbarium was moved into the Plant Sciences Building to be used in plant research. Davis stated that the committee recommended last spring that the museum “be maintained and ex panded.” HE SAID THAT the committee feels that the museum is a fine educational aid and an important part of the educational system. “We don’t know why some steps haven’t been taken to keep the museum open,” Davis added. “I personally hope that something will be done to re-open the facility and expand its usefulness.” Dr. C- C. Doak,. former head of the Department of Biology, who was closely associated with Dr. O. M. Ball, s first curator of the mu seum, said that he was not sur prised to hear about the closing. WHEN ASKED WHO could be credited for founding the museum, Doak stated that he felt Ball and Dr. Mark Francis were instru mental in establishing the collec tion. Doak recalled his student days in 1915 when Ball, then head of the Department of Biology, and Francis, professor of veterinary medicine, allowed him to accom pany them on some of their ex peditions. “Those two men were always trying to obtain something new for the collection,” Doak said. Davis said that to operate the museum as the committee recom mended would cost approximately $25,000 annually. This would in clude allowances for a curator, an assistant and modest expansion. OLD MUSEUM BUILDING .. closed by 1959 state law FORUM SPEAKER SA YS Marriage Boom Blame Placed On Affections By CLOVIS McCALLISTER Battalion Staff Writer Dr. Robert Ledbetter told ap proximately 125 students Tuesday that the “boom” in high school and college marriages is a result of “wanting someone to give us their affection and someone to whom we can give our affections.” Ledbetter, former director* of the Methodist Student Center in Austin, was speaking at the sec ond session of the Marriage Forums being conducted by the YMCA. He is presently a counselor at the University of Texas Health Center and visiting lecturer in the De partment of Sociology there. THE PROBLEMS brought about by pressures to make marriage meaningful are the destructive a- gents in many marriages, he said. “A couple in love and determined to make it is the best answer to the problems in marriage,” Led better said. The effect of shifting from a rural society to an urban society, the change in the role and status of men and women and the develop ment of labor-saving 1 devices in A&M, Argentina Eye Ag Agreement Dean of Agriculture R. E. Pat terson has indicated A&M may soon sign an agreement with the Argentinian government to help establish two new agricultural im provement prograihs in the Latin American Country. The programs involve agricultu ral and rural development and the establishment of an Institute of Agricultural Economics in Argen tina. THE AGREEMENT would call for A&M to supply a technical staff to organize the programs and to accept additional Argentinian students here. Patterson and five other A&M representatives recently visited the South American country on in vitation from the Agricultural Ex periment Station Extension Ser vice branch of the Argentinian government. Argentina has great potential for many kinds of livestock and crop production and could be a world leader in these areas, Pat terson s'aid. HE SAID THE agreement would be valuable to tl|e United States because ‘we can learn from them, too.” Five Argentinian officials are scheduled to visit the A&M cam pus and Washington, D.C., in late spring, according to Patterson. Other A&M staffers who made the visit were Dr. Tyrus Timm, head of the Department of Agri cultural Economics and Rural Sociology; Dr. J. G. McNeely, pro fessor of agricultural economics; Dr. John D. Williams, Data Proces sing Center; J. C. Smith, superin tendent of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Substation near Angle- ton; and Dr. T. C. Cartwright, pro fessor of genetics in the Depart ment of Animal Husbandry. the home are reasons for the prob lems in marriage, he said. LEDBETTER SAID some of the of problems in early marriage are sex relations, finances, social acti vities, in-law relations, religions activities and mutual friends. He said he believed these were only Indications of deeper difficulties. Ledbetter added that all of the problems in a marriage can be placed in three important headings: sex, money and food These can be used as weapons by either mate to combat the other in spite, he said. To overcome the problems of marriage, Ledbetter urged improv ing communications, setting values for one’s self, accepting a mate for what she really is, having common goals, working for affection and spiritual commitment. A COUPLE PLANNING marri age does not need a large financial reserve, but does need a job to enable them to marry, the coun selor said. Ledbetter said the average en gagement period is six months but he thought the couple should know each other at least a year before getting married. He said this would allow the couple to know each other better, but he added, a person will only get to know their mate through marriage. An engagement can be too long as well as too short, Ledbetter said, and he added the problem with long engagements was with the physi cal aspect. Ledbetter said teachers and par ents can postpone the early mar riages by trying to keep down steady dating, talking about the meaning of emotional involvement or marriage and pointing to the responsibility problems that ar rive in marriages, such as finances. WILL DIRECT GRADUATE RESEARCH Statistics Institute Director Named Dr. H. O. Hartley, and Iowa State University professor and an internationally known statistician, will join the A&M faculty this summer as director of the new Graduate Institute of statistics. Hartley, an authority in the theoretical and practical phases of statistics, will head the graduate and research effort in statistics, said Dr. Wayne C. Hall, dean of g-raduate studies. The Graduate Institute of Statis tics is developing the first program of its kind in Texas. THE DOCTOR of Philosphy de gree in statistics will be offered, and a research program inaugu rated. Statistics, an applied mathema tical science, has become inci-eas- ingly important in research in the sciences, engineering and other similiar fields. Hartley, who started his acade mic career at the University of London, is an elected fellow of the International Statistical In stitute. In 1934 he received the Ph.D. (magna cum laude) in mathema tics at Berlin University and in 1940 took the PH.D. in mathema tical statistics at Cambridge. The University of London in 1953 awarded him the D. Sc. degree in mathematical statistics. HE WAS STATISTICIAN at the Harper Adams Agricultural Col lege, Newport, Shropshire, Eng land, in charge of design and analy sis of poultry experiments at three experimental stations from 1936- 1938. During World War II his pro jects included preparation of bomb ing tables for the American air forces in England. He worked as scientific officer to Scientific Computing Service, Ltd., London. Hartley became a lecturer in statistics at University College, London, in 1946. HE WAS NAMED as visiting professor in statistics at Iowa State in 1953 and in 19^4 joined the faculty and taught postgrad uate courses. During 1961 Hartley served as a visiting professor in statistics at Harvard University. The Hartleys have two children, a son and a daugther. DR. H. O. HARTLEY