The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 24, 1964, Image 1

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    VIGOROUS CAMPAIGNING PAYS
Jim Benson, center, is typical of campaigning civilian can
didates.
New
For
Are
Editors
’64-’65
Chosen
Student editors for the 1964-65 school year have been
chosen, A&M University President Earl Rudder announced
Thursday night.
Ronnie Fann from Houston was named editor of The
Battalion, while John Wright, also of Houston, was chosen
Battalion summer editor.
David Stiles, Midlothian student and freshman basket
ball coach, was elected to head The Texas A&M Review, mag
azine of the School of Arts and Sciences.
Named to the position of Aggie-
land editor was Wallace M. Migura
of Yorktown, while Hamilton D.
McQueen was selected editor of The
Texas A&M Agriculturists, mag
azine of the School of Agriculture.
The Texas A&M Engineer new
editor is Ernest R. Holloway of
Dallas.
Fann announced the new Bat
talion editors, beginning with Tues
day’s edition, are as follows; Glenn
Dromgoole, managing editor; John
Wright, news editor; Maynard Rog
ers, sports editor, and Clovis Mc-
Callister and Mike Reynolds, assist-
and news editors.
WRIGHT
Summer Battalion
MIGURA
Aggieland
mcqueen
Agriculturist
HOLLOWAY
Engineer
Foreign Students
To Visit Houston
Forty foreign students from
A&M University will be in Hous
ton Saturday and Sunday as guests
of Houston’s Institute of Interna
tional Education.
The students will be entertained
by Houston families, Mrs. Fred E.
Smith, chairman of A&M’s Inter
national Hospitality Committee, re
ported.
A highlight of the Houston vis
it will be a tour of the Manned
Spacecraft Center.
Che Battalion
Volume 61
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1964
Number 36
Civilian, Corps Rivalry
Turns
Record Vote
By BOB SCHULZ
Battalion Staff Writer
A&M students cast a record 2,666 votes in the campus
elections held yesterday.
It had been announced that the polls would remain open
until 8 p. m. Thursday, but at that time a long line of voters
still crowded the halls near the machines. The polls remained
open until all students waiting had cast their votes.
Of the ten position to be chosen, civilians gained six.
Corps students cast 1,616 votes to civilians 1,050.
Gaining the post of Student Senate President was Frank
Muller. A member of the Corps, Muller is from McClean, Va.
and majors in Pre-Law. He was opposed by Don Warren and
Roy D. Johnson.
Vice-president went to civil-
ian Ronald Pate, an account
ing major from Waco. Run
ning against Pate were Mike
Beck, John D. Gay and Rich
ard M. Dooley.
David Moreman, a civilian vet
erinary medicine major from Hed-
ley, gained the post of parliamen
tarian. He ran against Thomas
Arnold and Charles E. Wallace.
The office of recording secre
tary was won by J. Donald Bowen,
a civilian architecture major from
Abilene. Other candidates were
Robert A. Beene and Daniel A.
Fischer.
The new head of the student
issues committee is Jay Jaynes.
From Falls Church, Va., Jaynes
majors in history and is a mem
ber of the Corps. He was opposed
by Robert G. Lee.
The public relations committee
will be headed by Eugene Gregory.
From Union City, Tenn., Gregory
is a Corps student majoring in
economics. Other candidates were
Sam Henry and Mike Wier.
James Allen will fill the office
of student life chairman. He was
opposed by William Bukellew and
David S. Clifton. A civilian, Allen
is an accounting major from Bryan.
William Altman of Odessa will
head the student welfare com
mittee. A management major, Alt
man is a civilian student. Cam
paigning against Altman was
James Bourgeois.
James Benson came out on top
as Civilian Yell Leader. From
Nacogdoches, Benson majors in
accounting. Other hopefuls were
Darrell Smith and Harvey Bashor.
George Huber, an aeronautical
engineering major from Three
Rivers, was elected Agent of the
Class of ’64.
6 SDX’ers Set
For Initiation,
Feed Tonight
Six Journalism students are ex
pected to be in Houston Friday
for the spring initiation of Sigma
Delta Chi, the profesional journal
ism society.
The joint initiation of pledges
from Sam Houston State Teachers
College, University of Houston and
A&M will be conducted at 6 p.m.
by the Texas Gulf Coast Chapter,
a profesional branch of Sigma
Delta Chi, said Robert P. Knight,
sponsor of the A&M chapter.
The initiation will be held at
the University of Houston and will
be headed by Gayle McNutt, class
’58, A&M, who is now state editor
for The Houston Post. Following
the initiation there will be a ban
quet at the Continental Hotel
where Paul Haney, new voice of
the Astronauts, will be the speaker.
Ben Matula, Michael Reynolds
and Ray Harris are the A&M
pledges who will be initiated.
Blood Drive Ends;
304 Ags Rejected
A final total of 868 Aggies
signed up to give blood in the
1964 Wadley Research Institute
Aggie Blood Drive. Of those that
volunteered, 304 were rejected for
reasons such as recent illness,
high blood presure, recent shots
or other medication.
The 564 pints donated was far
short of the goal of 1,000 pints
set for the drive. Had all those
willing to give been able to do
so, the Aggies would have come
very close to their goal, said Alan
Peterson, student welfare com
mittee chairman.
Military Rating
To Be Given
By Inspectors
Col. Denzil L. Baker, comman
dant of the Corps of Cadets, ex
pressed optimism Wednesday aft
ernoon concerning the outcome of
the annual Federal Inspection and
Review to be held Friday and Sat
urday.
"We are expecting a very satis
factory report from the team,”
said Baker.
Cadets of the Army ROTC and
the Department of M i li t a r y
Science will undergo a detailed in
spection by officers from Fourth
Army Headquarters, Fort Sam
Houston. Col. Daniel H. Heyne,
Lt. Col. W. F. Moore and Lt. Col.
G. T. Vird are to supervise the in
spection.
“The inspection will in no way
affect A&M’s rating as a military
college. That is determined in a
completely different manner,” said
Lt. Col. T. A. Hotchkiss, also of
the Department of Military
Science.
Heyne, Moore and Vird will ar
rive Friday morning and be
briefed by Baker. They will then
observe classroom instruction, ad
ministrative procedures, training
processes and facilities during the
day. They will lunch with Baker
and Dean of Students James P.
Hannigan in the Memorial Student
Center.
The inspection team will con
tinue operations Friday afternoon
following a briefing by Cadet Col
onel Paul Dresser.
Ten more officers from Fort
Sam Houston will arrive Friday
night. They will aid Heyne, Moore
and Vird when they conduct an in-
the-ranks inspection Saturday
morning at th£ Corps dorms in the
New Area.
The inspection will be concluded
by a review of the Army ROTC
units at 9:15 a.m. on the Main
Drill Field.
The inspection team will retire
to a conference with Baker and
Hannigan, after which, the inspec
tion will be considered closed.
The Department of Military
Science will be notified later
whether or not they received a
satisfactory or unsatisfactory rat
ing.
TYPICAL THURSDAY VOTING SCENE
Students patiently wait their turn at the voting booths.
Machine Records Confab
To Draw Top Statisticians
BY CLOVIS McCALLISTER
Battalion Staff Writer
Leading men in the fields of
unit records, computing and data
processing will be the speakers at
the 9th annual College and Uni
versity Machine Records Confer
ence to be held at A&M University
Monday through Wednesday.
Approximately 400 persons have
pre-registered for the conference,
said Don F. Morrison, program
chairman. He added that 153 col
leges, representing 27 states and
Canada, will be represented.
Morrison said five special flights
have been planed from Dallas and
three from Houston to accommo
date the registrants. Also, he
said, each has planned a couple of
stand-by planes. Trans-Texas Air
ways has planned for the special
flights to be made in 40 passenger
Convair planes.
Theme for the conference is
“New Horizons Through Thought”
and topics for the meeting have
been arranged so the registrant
many attend meetings within his
interest. The topics are arranged
under the heading of unit record,
computing and data processing.
Each will host speakers who are
authorities in the field.
The conference will begin at 8
a.m. Monday in the Ramada Inn,
conference headquarters, with a
MSC
Gives
Directorate
25 Awards
Twenty-five students and 11
other persons received awards at
the annual Memorial Student Cen
ter Council and Directorate ban
quet at A&M University Thursday
night.
Six of the students received the
MSC’s distinguished service award.
Included in the top award list
are:
Michael Lee Use and Jack Herff
Miller of Corpus Christi; Marion
Wesley Leftwich, Jr. of Lubbock;
Robert Wallace Wimbish of Mil
ford; Howard Martin Head of
Richardson, and Lawrence N. Gar
rett of San Antonio.
The distinguished service honor
also was presented to Dr. Travis
Parker, Capt. Bobby Dudley, Dr.
W. F. Krueger, Reagan Brown and
Dr. Charles Hall, all A&M faculty-
staff members.
John Lindsey of Houston, A&M
Former Students Association presi
dent, also received the MSC’s top
award.
Appreciation awards went to
Mrs. Earl Knebel, wife of an A&M
faculty member; C. M. Sykes, re
tired staff member; and faculty
members Dr. A. F. Chalk, Jerrell
B. Jones and Graham Horsely.
Student appreciation awards were
presented to:
Alvaro Carlos Restrepo of Bo
gota, Columbia; Bob D. Bell of
Bryan; Colin Edward Lamb of
Caldwell; Danny Parker of Cen
ter; Jerry Lynn Partridge and
Horace Jerome Rektorik of Cor
pus Christi, and Michael Irvin
Wier of Deer Park.
Also receiving the awards were
John Arthur Reuscher and Ter
rance A. Oddson of Dallas, Rob
ert John Korose of Houston; Jos
eph Myers Watson, Jr. of Hurst;
Terry Royce Griffin of Mt. En
terprise, and Charles William Rob
inson of Orange.
Others honored were Charles C.
Beal of Port Arthur; R. Russell
Huddleston, Michael L. Lutich and
Harold C. Brown of San Antonio;
Garry Lee Tisdale of Tyler, and
Albert M. Simmons of Vega.
welcome speech from A&M Uni
versity President Earl Rudder.
Rudder will be followed by Jack
R. Woolf, president of Arlington
State College, who will give the
keynote address entitled “D a t a
Processing For Educational Man
agement.”
Woolf will discuss the use of
data processing for achieving ob
jectives in the management of aca
demic programs from the view
point of the president’s office. He
will give ideas of the “total Sys
tem” concept and the interrelation
ships of teaching activities, stu
dent records and fiscal records.
Dr. Robert Fano, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology professor
of electrical engineering, will
transmit data through a Western
Union Telex unit from the Rama
da Inn, through the Memorial Stu
dent Center, which will relay it to
Houston, and from Houston to
MIT. Calculations will be made at
MIT and transmitted back to the
Ramada Inn within seconds. This
will be presented Tuesday morn
ing at 10:45 during a talk by Fano
on the “Progress Report On Proj
ect ‘MAC.’”
Project “MAC” is Multiple Ac
cess Computer, similar to the tele
phone system where several peo
ple may be using the telephone at
the same time but only the persons
talking to each other are aware of
the use.
Jim Baker of Price Waterhouse
and Company will discuss “Data
Processing Audit Trials” at a
Monday morning general session.
He will point out audit trials and
control requirements for a mecha
nized data processing system from
the viewpoint of both the auditor
and systems man.
Total University College Oper
ating System will be discussed
Monday morning by Richard A.
Mason of International Business
Machine, Inc.
“Social Security as a Control
Number of Faculty, Staff and
Spring Picnic Set
The Apartment Council will
hold its annual spring picnic in
Hensel Park Saturday from 2:30
to 6 p.m.
Each family has been asked
to bring a picnic lunch, and free
ice cream and cokes will be
furnished. The picnic will include
a drawing for free prizes and is
open to all married students
living in Hensel, College View
and the project houses.
A charge of 50f per family
will be made to all families not
presenting a Civilian Student
Activity Card.
Student” will be a topic Monday
afternoon. Jack Thornton, IBM
director at Baylor University, and
Robert Gates, coordinator of the
National Education Act, Florida
State, will deliver the lecture.
Other general session talks will
be concerned with a discussion of
a total University-College Operat
ing System; Mass Systems Com
plex and Data Transmission,
Theories of Information Retrieval,
Data Processing Curricula and Li
brary Circulation.
Tuesday afternoon’s general
session topics are Where To By
1984, Docutran Scanner-Student
Data, The Use of “pert” in Educa
tion and Data Processing in Pub
lic Education.
State of the Art of Automatic
Scheduling and Registration will
be the final topic which will be
held Wednesday afternoon.
Morning sessions will be divided
into the field of interest.
Wire
Review
By The Associated Press
WORLD NEWS
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—
Cuba has informed U. N. Secre
tary General U Thant that it will
not stand for U. S. reconnais
sance flights over Cuba or other
provocative acts, an authorita
tive source said Thursday night.
The letter, sent by Cuba’s For
eign Minister Raul Roa, did not
say what steps Cuba intended
to take.
★ ★ ★
VIENTIANE, Laos — A right
ist junta Thursday offered to re
turn full control in Laos to neu
tralist Premier Prince Souvanna
Phouma if he enlarges the govern
ment with additional rightist lead
ers.
★ ★ ★
BERLIN—East German Com
munists accuse Red China of de
manding that they break with
the Soviet Union and thus help
split West Germany away from
the United States.
This bomb-which likely means
the Soviet-Chinese dispute is
deeper than ever-was exploded
in a speech by East German
Politburo member Herman Mat-
em, reported Thursday by the
official Communist news agency
ADN.