3re Ganges a from jyj ' h > impressi;: m y Saturd i; k fi fth p,,' to s >xth. Tt: ssouri 13.3 i 0 ^ troun^ 1 third pi* ch 'gan Stat^ Notre Dam s h y a sligli Points to 28;, s 254 poif. Alabama 22, 117 and Na ma Whipj3i| Illinois totl isconsin lj.| r ?ia 14-0 atd weaker f rot 6. »s with first ntheses, sea. nts on a 1). sis: ^ L Let’s Have Bevo Steak Thanksgiving! Texas A&M University Che Battalion Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1963 Number 170 T Pk 0 0 31! 1 0 fjj 0 1 33! 1 1 3t; 1 0 2!i 1 0 25) 7 1 « Ht 6 1 1 7 1 0 in 8 10 3) votes, listed izona State, Mississippi olina, Pem, isconsin. iialif' Team > g 0 ] f lean 0 get its ist ConfereB pring, has fu- qualifying in ty players an) en received {• y scholarship; ns of Tombill 1 u a d memte nonship teai few YorkCitj terman; Ml from Missin ior lettemu Art Kyle, k ers of the gil duster,” a p Jay Fergusii 9 8 7 6 r 1 0 T fWAlt coMs *lo"9 £oak«l Pa.f't c (iiu it IS# Ro^d.y f 4 Tity AAC4. , *RMa.n5ee Private Room Phones Slated Available In ’66, Pend ing Approva l 6 Days Left Until Turkey Day 1 GATE I a as C3 ps or BONFIRE CUTTING AREA REVEALED Saturday morning, outfits will begin hauling logs along route. f SCON A IX '.V I Pastoriza Accepts I Roundtable Post Thomas A. Pastoriza, president of Asociacion para el Desarrollo Inc., a private, non-profit develop ment association which is sponsor ing several programs including an agricultural school in Santiago, has accepted a position as a round table co-chairman in the ninth an nual Student Conference on Na tional Affairs, to be held in the Memorial Student Center, Dec. 11- 14. Pastoriza was born in the city of Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic, Feb. 7, 1919. He attended George Washington University, graduating with a BSc. degree in 1943. In 1944 he obtained his civil engineering Degree at the University of Santo Domingo. During the years 1944-45 he worked with an American firm of consulting engineers in South America. Since 1945 he has been with Augusto Espaillat Sues., C. por A., a prominent dry-goods firm established in Santiago in 1870 by his grandfather. At present he is the general manager of the firm and vice-president of the board. Serge Lentz, the only West ern journalist to enter Red China for the past decade, will present a film and lec ture Thursday evening at 8 in Guion Hall. Admission is free to activity card holders. He is a member of American Management Association, Ameri can Society of Civil Engineers, Chamber of Commerce of Santiago, and Association Dominicana de In- genieros y Artuitectos. Recently he served as President of a commission which studied and made recommendations for the establishment of a regional de velopment authority modelled aft er the T.V.A. to plan and manage the future development programs in the Yaque Valley, where San tiago is located. Pastoriza is married to Claudia Tavares and they have two child ren. The theme of the conference this year is U. S. monetary and fiscal policy: a taxpayer’s view. Approximately 150 delegates form 80 Colleges and Universities. Today’s Thought A school is more than just stu dents, it is a spirit. Bonfire Work NowUnderway; Center Pole Up Towering behind Duncan Dining Hall is a 95-foot pole which marks the beginning of the actual con struction. This structure has been put up by Spider D-l. THERE ARE TWO poles spliced together that were bought from the Navasota International Paper Co. for $85. One pole is 80 feet tall and the other is 30 feet tall. A 10- foot splice binds them together, and the pole is sunk 5 feet into the ground. This makes the center- pole 95 feet above the ground. The Bonfire Committee paid for the poles. Jeff Harp, vice president of the Civilian Student Council, an nounced further plans for civilian participation in bonfire work Tues day night. The civilians have been asked to Oceanography Ship Is Now Operational Faculty Colloquim Hosts Climate Talk Gulf coast weather and A&M University’s role in the meteoro logical satellite program will be the topic at 4 p.m. Thursday for the A&M Graduate Faculty Colloquium. Coffee will be served at 3:30 p.m. as graduate faculty and students gather in the Archi tecture Building Auditorium. The Department of Oceanogra phy and Meteorology will present the program for this colloquium, the second of the 1963-64 series. Dr. Dale F. Leipper, department head, and associate professor A. H. Thompson, who has done ex tensive research in the area of meteorological satellites, will participate. Thompson’s announced topic is “Gulf Coast Weather from 800 Kilometers Above, A&M's Role in the Meteorological Satellite Pro gram.” “We can have complete telephone service in every stu dent’s room on the campus by January of 1966 if Mr. Rudder, the Board and the student body give us their approval,’’ said Clark C. Munroe Director of Personnel for the University. The service would include complete on-off campus dialing with no operator needed and long distance calls too. Each student would be asked to pay $2.50 a month for the service. Considering that University of Texas students pay $10.00 a month for the same service, this is quite a bar gain, said Munroe. The plan is just part of a operation to completely rework the University communications system that was begun last January, said Munroe. At that time different corporations that specialize in communications systems were contacted and Southwestern States Telephone Co. came up with the best proposal. The plan which would put a phone on every professor’s desk, unite the student body with com plete communication facilities, re wire the existing system elimina ting the present haphazard, some times poorly connected existing system, lay a new trunk line be tween Bryan and College Station, would cost the University $80,000, said Monroe. Included in the system would be a throw-switch which would cause phones to go through an operator after a certain time of night to eliminate crank or nu- By JIM SCHROEDER Special Writer Alaminos, the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology’s new research vessel, set out Tues day morning for her first run after her successful sea trails last week. In her shake down cruise, Ala minos set out from Orange, travel ing at an average speed of about 12.3 knots, the ship never lost sight of land, as this was just a practice cruise for the Coast Guard to see if the ship would do everything ex pected of it. “We checked some of our elec tronic equipment on board, includ ing a new means of propulsion from the bow of the ship, instead U. N. Club Plans Friday Program The United Nations Club will meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the YMCA Building. The program will include a film entitled “Sense Perception,” Part II. The first part was held on Nov. 8. Proceeding the film there will be an election of a club secretary. A social hour will follow the program. of the stern,” said Dr. H. J. Mc- Lellan, professor of Oceanography and Meteorology. “Things went as well as we ex pected them to, and we encount ered no real problems, with the weather good, and the sea fairly calm,” said McLellan. On the second run Alaminos left Orange Tuesday morning, and she will travel some 250 miles into the Gulf of Mexico, where she will be used for actual work with her electrical equipment. The cruise is expected to end Friday or Sat urday when she will return to Gal veston and make that city her home port. “We have other cruises planned for the future, such as from Dec. 21, we go back into the Gulf region for seismec and magnetic studies, Jan. 2, to Feb. 15 for study of physical oceanography of the western Gulf, and in February or July, we study geology of the Caribbean. In late spring, there are more short cruises planned for the testing of our equipment, while on the first of July to Sept. 10, we study the physical oceanogra phy off the northern coast of Brazil and Guianas,” said Otis Eickenhorst, administrative assist ant to McLellan. guard the bonfire during the wee and possibly crucial hours of Wednesday morning. Students from Puryear, Walton, Hart and Leggett will guard from 2:45 a.m. until 4:45 and Law, Mitchell, Mil ner and Dorm 13 will stand guard from 4:45 a.m. until 6:30 a.m. THE CIVILIANS have also been asked to help stand guard between 7 and 8 p.m. each night while the Corps eats dinner. They are sched uled. as follows: Friday night, Puryear Hall; Saturday night, day students; Sunday night, Walton Hall; Monday night. Hart Hall; Tuesday night, Mitchell Hall. Dorm representatives will meet with Harp Friday night in the Student Senate Office on the lower level of the Memorial Student Center at 9 to finish plans for Saturday’s cutting area work. THE TEXAS Engineering Heavy Equipment School is furnishing the cranes that stack the logs and also set the centerpole. The 10 foot hole was dug free of charge by the Milstead Foundation Drilling Company of Bryan. Cadet Captain David L. Lyons, Company Commander of Spider D said, “I don't know how the Spiders originally received the honor of putting up the centerpole, but as long as I have been here and talk ing to former Spiders, it just has always been a Spider tradition to put it up.” Lyons stated that work on splic ing the pole began Wednesday afternoon and the work was com pleted Thursday at noon. Range, Forestry Students Planning Local Turkey Sale “Would you like to buy a turkey ? ” This will be the question asked by the students in the Range and Forestry Club this week as they canvass the Bryan-College Station area. This area has been divided into 19 sectors and each sector will be covered by a three-man team, said Dr. J. D. Dodd, assistant pro fessor of Range and Forestry. The purpose for selling the turkeys will be to raise money to help finance club activities, said Dodd. The money will be used to help pay the expenses of delegates to state and national conventions. The plant identification team’s ex penses to the conventions will also come from this money, he said. The turkeys will range from 10- 12 pounds, mentioned Dodd, but he said that anyone desiring a bird larger than this can get one by asking the salesman. The birds will be cleaned and dressed, and are wrapped in cellophane bags. They will be delivered to the buyer’s residence by the student who sells them, he said. This sale lasts through Tuesday, but turkeys will be available for Christmas, said Dodd. If anyone desiring a turkey has not been contacted, he can call the Department of Range and Forestry and place an order there. The num ber is VI 6-8791. BA Wives Presented Cooking Program Valuable cooking tips were pre sented to the Business Admini stration Wives Club by Mrs. Wil lie Belle Bogard, Home Service Center Director of Bryan Public Utilities, who discussed and de monstrated the preparation and cooking of casseroles. siance calls disturbing students sleep. In March it was found that the south wing of the Academic Building was the center of all wire plans of the campus and that the lower floor would be needed for the complex equipment that must be installed in a large, air conditioned space. After research was done on the Academic Build ing, it was found that there had been a severe foundation collapse in 1953. Many braces and beams were placed under the old foundation and laying cables through the foundation walls would be virtual ly impossible. This major problem was over come with the addition of plans for even lower cavities to be dug and running the cables under the old foundation. July brought plans to remove old wiring that is largely responsi ble for the low quality of voice re ception in the present system. A new cable will be laid from Bryan to College Station and voice boosters will be added to improve signal strength. The large number of long dis tance calls would be handled by an improved toll center and credit cards would be issued to those stu dents who wish to have them. There would be three ways to place a long distance call: billing the call to a third party, placing the call collect and with the cre dit card, stated Monroe. The credit card system would prevent the university from being a billing agent for the phone com pany. A phone book would be printed for the university just as one is printed now for Bryan - College Station. “The plan is now ready for pre sentation to President Rudder and the Board. After that, a referen dum will probably be held to see if the student will pay the price,” concluded Monroe. Foreign Student’s Spouses Honored The Hospitality Committee of the International Institute of Edu cation, entertained the wives of the international students Tuesday afternoon. The guests represented six countries, including England, the United Arab Republic, India, Pakistan, Indonesia and Colombia. A movie, “Friends at Our Doors,” prepared by the State Department, was shown in co-operation with Rutgers University. Tea and cookies were served by Mrs. Dan Davis, chairman of the subcommittee for student wives. The Hospitality Room will be open each afternoon Mondays through Fridays from 2-5 p.m. SENIORS BEGIN CLEARING PATHS Mark Jackson of G-l fells or\^ o* firs 4