Registration Schedule Registration for the Spring Semester 1964 will be con ducted in Sbisa Hall. Registration cards will be issued in accordance with the following schedule: FRIDAY, JANUARY 31 1:00 to 3:00—All whose surnames begin with G, H, I, J, K. 3:00 to 4:30—All whose surnames begin with A, B. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 8:00 to 10:00—All whose surnames begin with T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z. 10:00 to 11:00—All whose surnames begin with L, M, N, O. 1:00 to 3:00—All whose surnames begin with P, Q, R, S. 3:00 to 4:00—All whose surnames begin with C, D, E, F. and next week—Stew! Che Battalion Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1964 Number 191 Space Fiesta To Draw Solons, NASA Officials Exhibits, Speakers To Highlight Show U. S. Blasts Ahead With Saturn Shot CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. US) — The great Saturn 1 rocket hurled the world’s heaviest man-made satellite into orbit Wednesday giv ing the United States added fire power to challenge the Soviet Union in the man-to-the-moon race. President Johnson watched the launching on a television set in his White House office in Wash ington and then issued a state ment hailing it as a “giant step forward for the United States space effort.” JOHNSON DESCRIBED it as the largest payload ever launch ed by any nation and said this country has now “proved we have the capability of putting great payloads into space.” He con gratulated the space team on be half of “a grateful and proud na- Governor Candidate Elected Former Student President A recently announced Republic- ian candidate for Texas Governor, Jack A. Crichton, has been presi dent of the 40,000-member Associ ation of Former Students. Crichton, a 1937 graduate and also Dallas A&M Club president, replaces L. F. Peterson of Fort Worth. Election of officers for John H. Lindsey Reds Announce Downing U. S. Training Jet WIESBADEN, Germany (JP) — The Soviet Union announced today a Russian fighter plane downed a U. S. jet trainer over Communist East Germany, killing the three officers aboard. The U. S. Army commander in Europe called on the Russians to make an immedi ate investigation. The Soviet Union disclosed the fate of the T39 trainer, missing for 24 hours, in a note released in Moscow accusing the United States of a provocative flight designed to increase tensions. Shortly thereafter, Gen. Paul L. Freeman, U. S. Army commander in Europe, sent a note calling for an investigation to Col. Gen. Ivan Yakubovsky, the Soviet command er in Germany. In Washington, the U. S. State Department summoned a Soviet Embassy official to its office to “protest in the strongest terms the shooting down” of the jet trainer. Officials said Asst. Secretary of State William R. Tyler had called Georgi M. Kornienko, No. 2 man in the Soviet Embassy, to come to his office at 3:30 p.m. EST to re ceive the protest. Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin could not be summoned, officials said, because he is ill. 1964 highlighted the annual con ference of association members here this weekend. John H. Lindsey of Houston, a partner with the Lindsey Insur ance Agency, became association vice president. Active in other former student groups, Lindsey is a former district vice president of the association. Crichton is president of Crich ton and Associates, 1963 vice presi dent of the association and chair man of the A&M Development ' Foundation. Three new members were added to the association’s executive board. They are Royce Wisen- baker, Tyler; Mike Dillingham, Alice; and John Cunningham, Gainesville. In addition, the new slate of of ficers included 11 district vice presidents and representatives to major committees. District officers are Dale Nix of Canadian, District 1; Frank Thompson of Midland, District 2; Frank Pool of San Angelo, Dis trict 3; B. L. Byrd of Wichita Falls, District 4; Bybee Weisinger of Gilmer, District 5; Bill Cham- lee of Temple, District 6. Others are Jeff Montgomery of Houston, District 7; Will Ed Jauer of San Antonio, District 8; Jim Heldenfels of Corpus Christi, Dis trict 9; Fred Clarke of Lafayette, Louisiana District, and Harvey Lynn of Los Angeles, Calif., At- Large District. Retiring board members include A. W. Davis, College Station; Dick Haas, Corpus Christi and Melvin Maltz, Houston. Holdover members are Guy King Jr., Waco; John M. Younger, Midland, and Jake T. Long, Gilmer. Jack A. Crichton San Antonio Group Sets Performance The San Antonio Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Victor Alessandro, will be on campus Feb. 6 for two concert per formances. All public and private schools in the Bryan-College Station area have been invited to hear the orchestra at a special 1:30 p.m. concert in G. Rollie White Coli seum. No admission will be charged. The main concert, at 8 p.m. Thursday, is open to Town Hall ticket holders. The orchestra is one of several events scheduled as a part of the Memorial Student Center Town Hall series. Tickets are available for the Thursday night concert, Bob Boone, A&M music coordinator, reported. Boone said the special student concert is designed to acquaint the younger people with symphonic music. The Texas-bred symphony and Texas-born conductor have ap peared throughout the United States and Mexico. Their concerts have been heard over nation-wide broadcasting facilities, as well as the armed services network and the Voice of America. United States Asks Details On Jet Junking GENEVA bP) — The United States has asked clarification of the new Soviet proposal to de stroy strategic bombers. The U. S. disarmament nego tiator, William C. Foster, and the Soviet delegate, Semyon K. Tsarap- kin met over an hour in the Ameri can delegation headquarters and subsequently lunched together in a downtown hotel. An American spokesman said Foster and Tsarapkin, cochairmen of the 17-nation disarmament con ference, discussed the future work of the conference. Other conference sources said the new Soviet proposal to “make a bonfire” of strategic bomber fleets was among the subjects discussed. Tsarapkin made the proposal to the conference Tuesday, leaving Western officials somewhat puz zled over what he really meant. There was a notable difference between his formal statement in the conference room and his sub sequent explanation to a news con ference. In his formal proposal he said strategic bombers although obso lete can still constitute a threat and should be destroyed. At his news conference he said he meant all bombing planes of all nations. I:!: tion.” In the opinion of many U. S. experts, the striking success of the colossal booster on its first two- stage test flight gave the United States a lead over the Soviets in rocket power. WHILE THE Saturn 1 recorded its significant success, another Cape Kennedy crew prepared for Thursday’s scheduled launching of the Ranger 6 space craft to the moon. Mothers Clubs Set Executive Meeting The Mid-Season Executive Board meeting of the Federa tion of A&M University Mothers Clubs will be held Saturday. The 14 officers who comprise the Executive Boacd will trans act much of the business and planning for the Federation which is composed of more than 50 clubs and over 2,000 members from all areas of Texas. Mrs. M. T. Harrington is the First Honorary President of the organization and Mrs. Earl Rud der is the Second Honorary President. Deadline Set For Cost Bids On 2 Projects Bids are to be received here Feb. 6 for air conditioning proj ects and other work involving two buildings on campus. Total estimated cost of the projects is $370,000, W. Howard Badgett, director of the University’s phy sical plant said. Opening of the bids is timed so as to allow their submission to the February meeting of the Board of Directors. “If the Board awards the contracts on these two buildings, it will give us 40 buildings total ly air conditioned or the major portions air conditioned,” Bad gett said. Among the 40 are seven under construction or maj or renovation. These will pro vide air conditioned living quar ters for one-third of all dormi tory residents. Bids to be received Feb. 6 are for air conditioning Bolton Hall, which houses the Depart ment of Electrical Engineering, and portions of the Mechanical Engineering Shop Building. In Bolton Hall the contractor also will make certain renovations. The portion of the Mechanical Shops Building to be air condi tioned includes most of the base ment and that portion of the main floor which houses class rooms, offices and some of the laboratories and shops. Willy Ley The 11-member House subcommittee on manned space flight, headed by Congressman Olin E. Teague will visit the A&M University Space Fiesta Feb. 14. Teague said the subcommittee will be accompanied by George M. Low, newly-named National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s deputy director for the Manned Spacecraft Center and other NASA officials. Visitors at the Space Fiesta will be able to make a rocket trip around moon minus the rigors of space flight training and without leaving mother earth. It’s one of several exhibits planned during the two-week observance of the nation’s efforts to cope with space, Fiesta / J officials reported. The eventf is sponsored by the Memorial Student Center Great Issues Committee. THE ORBIT AROUND MOON, called a “Space-A-Tarium,” is an imaginary, vivid trip giving the public an inkling of the wonders to be experienced by Project Apollo astronauts on their forthcoming roundtrip moon voyage. Its spon sor is General Electric. Wernher Von Braun Robert A. The exhibit, resembling a hemi sphere, has four portal entries. In the dim light inside, the visitors will see a large model of the world with stars twinkling overhead. There are four control panels to stimulate various space activities, including the moon flight. At another station the partici pants can blast-off into space, and the lunar expedition gives the viewer the feeling of really mov ing into space as earth becomes smaller and smaller during the trip. A narrator’s voice describes what is taking place as the moun tains and craters of the moon ap pear. AT ANOTHER PANEL, would- be missile marksmen have an op portunity to shoot a guided missile into the universe. At a fourth panel, the visitors can launch and guide a missile over the top of the world. Space authorities such as X-15 astronaut Robert A. Rushworth, Feb. 7; Willy Ley, Feb. 13, and Warnher von Braun, Feb. 14, will be the speakers. Other exhibits, which will be only space-related subjects, include N descriptions of Projects Mercury, Gemini and Apollo. A replica of the Gemini capsule will be dis- Rushworth played. Formal Dedication Of TMA Planned Texas Maritime Academy history enters a new phase this weekend. Formal dedication ceremonies are scheduled at 2 p.m. Saturday and the cadets will sail Sunday on a two-month training cruise in tropical waters and northward into Maine. The Academy combines a uni versity education and training for leadership posts afloat and ashore with the maritime industries. Local, state and federal officials Heaton Forsees Few Changes In Spring Enrollment Picture Spring registration will follow the usual procedure this year and the number of students enrolling probably will be the same as last year, according to H. L. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registration. Heaton said Wednesday that each spring there is a decrease of 500 to 750 students from the number enrolled during the fall semester. The decrease is accredited to graduation, first year drop-outs, students transferring and students not able to register for various reasons. Heaton said he expects the spring enrollment to run around 7,000 which was the number of returning students for the spring semester last year. There were approximately 200 new students last year consisting of transfer students, mid-semester graduates and graduate students. He said there were 30 graduate stu dents enrolling in the graduate school last year and he expects about the same number this year. He added that the process for registering will be the same as in the past with the directions inside the Official Schedule of Classes. will participate in the dedication ceremonies in front of the Acad emy headquarters on Galveston’s shoreline. A&M President Earl Rudder will make the principal address. THE PLATFORM GUESTS will include Lt. Gov. Preston Smith, House Speaker Byron M. Tunnell, State Sen. Aaron R. Schwartz, President Sterling C. Evans of the A&M Board of Directors and Chan cellor M. T. Harrington, Congress man Clark W. Thompson, Admiral Edwin J. Roland, commandant of the Coast Guard, Rear Admiral See Related Story Page 6 Charles Lyman of the Eighth Naval District and Capt. Thomas King of the U. S. Maritime Ad ministration. Others on the program include Rabbi Alfred S. Dreyfus, Temple B’Nai Israel; the Rev. Amos C. Carey, St. George’s Episcopal Church; and the Rev. Joseph Crosthwaite, St. Mary’s Cathedral. Members of the Board of Visitors of the Academy will also participate in dedication. The 15-man board advises the president of A&M on Academy matters. The members, chosen by the Board of Directors of A&M University, come from Texas cities. Several are distinguished in ship building, steamship operation, port operations and international com merce. Glo hetrotters Due Feb. 10 The Harlem Globetrotters, often called the “Magicians of Basket ball,” will appear in G. Rollie White at 8 p.m. Feb. 10. Abe Saperstein’s 37th edition of the Trotters will take on the San Francisco Golden Gaters in a per formance sponsored by the A&M Sigma Delta Chi chapter, national journalism society. In addition to the game, nu merous other acts will be provided for halftime entertainment, in cluding Cab Calloway, unicylists, equilibrists, juggler, comic acroba tic and trampolinists. John Wright of the SDX chapter said tickets will be sold at Jarrott’s drugstores in downtown Bryan and Townshire shopping center and the Exchange Store. Tickets prices range from $1.25 for students and dates to $2 for adults general ad mission and $2.50 for reserved seats. Proceeds will be used to finance projects undertaken by the jour nalism organization, he added. Members of The Battalion staff will play members of the Brazos Valley Press Club in a preliminary game. The Globetrotters have performed in 82 countries, including some behind the iron curtain, during the last 14 years. Saperstein organ ized the Trotters 37 years ago. Wire Review WIRE REVIEW By The Associated Press WORLD NEWS WASHINGTON — Reports from Saigon indicate that a South Viet namese army corps commander has ousted the military junta in a bloodless coup, U. S. authorities reported Wednesday night. The leader of the Saigon insur gents was identified as Maj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, 1st Army Corps commander. U. S. NEWS WASHINGTON — A 5-cent stamp in memory of the late President John F. Kennedy will be issued on his 47th birthday anniversary, May 29, Postmaster General John A. Gronouski said Wednesday. TEXAS NEWS DALLAS — Mrs. Marguerite Oswald said Wednesday that only if the Warren Commission permits her attorney to attend its sessions and cross examine witnesses will she be able to accept its findings as to the guilt or innocence of her son in the assassination of Presi dent Kennedy. Mrs. Oswald also appealed pub licly to President Lyndon B. John son to answer her telegram of Jan. 22 asking that her attorney, Mark Lane of New York City, be per mitted to represent her and cross examine witnesses before the War ren Commission. 'kirk AUSTIN — City police armed with shotguns pressed a citywide manhunt Wednesday following the shooting of two patrolmen who were attempting to halt a tavern burglary.