A&M Gets $440,000 In Grants Award Given For Research In Radiation The University has received a grant of $260,000 from the Na tional Institutes of Health to sup port radiation research on ani mals, A&M President Earl Rud der has announced. The grant, which covers a four year period, was made by the Division of Radiological Health in the National Institutes of Health. The NIH is an agency of the De partment of Health, Education and Welfare. Dr. Eugene Hupp, associate pro fessor of biology and the project’s chief investigator, said goats have been selected as the experimental animals. Effects of continuous low level radiation on their phy siological performance will be ex plored. Dr. George Krise, professor of biology is co-investigator. Hupp said the project is linked to a study now underway by Dr. Sidney Brown of the Department of Biological Science and Dr. Al bert Casey of the Department of Educational Psychology, who are investigationg radiation effects on sensory perception in goats. The research is supported by a $111,- 000 NIH grant received in Septem ber. Both programs use the gamma radiation facility at the Nuclear Science Center. Hupp said goats have been chos en for the research. He said the animals will be subjected to con tinuous irradiation for about 42 months, with cobalt - 60 as the radiation source. Cbe Battalion Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1964 Number 90 Black Day In A&M-BU Relations Came During 1926 Football Game By GLENN DROMGOOLE Managing Editor One of the oldest football rivalries in the Southwest will be renewed Saturday when A&M and Baylor University meet in Waco. It was an earlier Aggie-Bear clash which wrote perhaps the most widely-known chapter of Aggie folklore. The year was 1926 and the setting much the same as this year’s game. Baylor was cele brating homecoming and the Ca dets were visiting Waco in an unofficial Corps trip. At halftime, with Baylor lead ing, a feud broke out between the two student bodies and an Aggie was killed. The infamous incident severed athletic rela tions between Baylor and A&M for five years. It all began when Baylor stu dents, as was the procedure then, entertained at halftime with a stunt. A Ford, filled with fe male Baylorites, was driven onto JAN. 24 — FEB. 12 Executive Course Hosts Oil Magnate 0. Pendleton Thomas, President of Sinclair Oil Corp., will be a principal speaker for the Executive Development Course Jan. 24 - Feb. 12 here. Plans for the thirteenth annual course were announced by Dr. John E. Pearson, head of the School of Business Administration. ‘ More than 100 firms, branches and U. S. Government "♦■organizations have sent man agement personnel to previous Danforth Lectures Open Nov. 3 Architect Victor Christ-Janer’s arival on campus Nov. 3 opens the Danforth Visiting Lecturer pro gram. Christ-Janer, whose background and training includes sculpture, painting and architecture will be on campus for two days. His public lecture scheduled at 8 p. m. Nov. 4, opens the 1964-65 Univer sity Lectures. Dr. Jotham Johnson, classical archaeologist, will visit here Dec. 3-4 as the second and final Dan forth Visiting Lecturer of the year. “The Danforth Visting Lecturers project,” Dr. R. W. Barzak, Uni versity lectures chairman said, “has as its purpose the strength ening of the intellectual, religious and cultural aspects of liberal ed ucation in the United States.” The project commencing its seventh year is sponsored jointly by the Danforth Foundation and the As sociation of American Colleges. “Texas A&M is proud to join this significant program,” Barzak said, “and happy to have the Uni versity Lectures strenghtened through this cooperative effort.” The Danforth Foundation has made a “generous grant” to the program to make available to col leges for visits of two days a week men and women of outstanding in tellectual stature from this country and abroad. sessions of the EDC. Atten dance is limied to approxi mately 50 men each year. “We are particularly pleased this year to have President Thomas of Sinclair among the outstanding speakers from across the nation who will address sessions of the EDC,” Pearson said. The course is unique in that the participants not only hear recog nized authorities discuss good man agement but cooperate in discus sions and personal interchange of ideas with experienced executives, W. E. Eckles of the business ad ministration faculty said. Thomas will speak Jan. 26 as the EDC participants examine the American business environment. His topic is “The Quiet Revolution in America’s Economy.” The native Texan is no stranger to the Bryan-College Station area. He taught in the Bryan high school in 1939-41 and earlier at Franklin. Thomas was born in Forney and attended East Texas State College where he received a BS degree with a major in mathematics in 1935. He received a MBA degree from the University of Texas in 1941 and was teaching in the Dal las schools when he entered the Navy. He returned to inactive status as a Naval lieutenant in 1945 and joined Sinclair Oil in the comp troller’s department. In 1954 he became an asisstant comptroller and three years later was named executive vice president. In 1960 he was elected a director. Earlier this year he was named president of Sinclair and a direc tor of Richfield Oil Corp. CSC Attempts To Hold Down Civilian Noise During Retreat The Civilian Student Council decided Thursday night that dormitory representatives should inform civilian students to hold down noise during retreat. Don Warren, Dorm 20 repre sentative, said a complaint had been filed with him Thursday that civilians were causing dis turbance during flag-lowering ceremonies. Treasurer John Carter said he had also noticed yells from the Corps at this time, In other action, vice president Jim Benson reported on a meet ing of the senior class with vhe senior football players. Benson said he was convinced that the team is doing the best they can and gave complete support to the team. Benson said the student body should get behind the team. He added that it was rough for the team after being outscored in five games. the field. The girls were carry- nig placards indicating the scores of their previous victories that season. Only two years before, Baylor students had staged a similar stunt which had highly provoked the Aggies. So in 1926 an Aggie yell leader asked Baylor cheer leaders to refrain from the Ford trick and he had received a pro mise that they would. Therefore, the Cadets wei'e a- gain provoked when the halftime stunt occured in 1926. They took the joke to mean mockery of the Aggie uniform and tradition, and thought the female characters were actually boys dressed as girls. Two Aggies rushed onto the field intending to turn off the ignition and one of the girls fell in the shuffle. Baylor’s male students then came to the defense of woman hood and the riot started. The City UF Campaign Paces State Drive The College Station United Chest Fund campaign was the first in the state to reach its goal this year, Texas headquarters reported Thursday. Hard work and prompt report ing of collections were responsible for the record, R. L. Hunt Jr., cam paign director here, said. The College Station goal of $19,- 000 was oversubscribed within the 14 days set aside for the cam paign. Workers collected 103.7 per cent of the goal. Aggies were greatly outnumber ed, as only about 100 Cadets got into the melee before the Aggie Band struck up “The Star Spangl ed Banner.” With this tune the Aggies stop ped fighting and assumed atten tion, but a fellow classmate fell dead. The cause of his death was never documented, but the story goes that he was hit in the head with a chair. At any rate, a blow during the melee felled and kill ed Aggie Charles M. Sessums. The incident was investigated by the two institutions’ presi dents, T. O. Walton of A&M and S. P. Brooks of Baylor, and this story was taken from their re port. The other half of the tale is not documented, but practically every Aggie has heard some ver- Air Force Art Show Sixteen paintings from the Air Force’s Doc- Center Monday through Nov. 6 The paint- umentary Art Collection will be shown in a ings depict varied subjects around the special exhibit in the Memorial Student world. The World at a Glance By The Associated Press International MOSCOW—Nikita Khrushchev was denounced indirectly Thursday by his successors for haughty one-man rule and delusions of infallibility. ★ ★ ★ UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—Secretary-General U Thant said Thursday it would be helpful and desirable if Nikita Khrushchev could tell the world about the circumstances leading to his exit as leader of the Soviet Union. ★ ★ ★ STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Writer-philisopher Jean-Paul Sartre won the 1964 Nobel Prize for literature Thursday and turned it down—explaining that he wanted to remain free in East-West cultural conflicts. ★ ★ ★ STRASBOURG, France—The European Parlia ment recommended by a lop-sided vote today that the European Common Market nations fix uniform prices on grain, meat and milk products within the next three months. National WASHINGTON—The FBI told President John son Thursday that its investigation of Walter W. Jenkins disclosed no information that the resigned White House aide “has compromised the security or interests of the United States in any manner.” ★ ★ ★ BAXTERVILLE, Miss.—The United States ex ploded a five kiloton nuclear device half a mile underground Thursday to see if American detection devices can spot sneak atomic tests by foreign powers. ★ ★ ★ DETROIT — Negotiators tried Thursday to evaporate the diminishing pool of local issues in the General Motors strike before United Auto Workers vote Sunday on contract and return-to- work proposals. ★ ★ ★ NEW YORK—Herbert Clark Hoover, the 31st president of the United States, received a simple, impressive private funeral service Thursday. The mourners were led by President Johnson, who came from Washington with his wife. The tumult of the 1964 presidential campaign died away during the 15-minute memorial service as Johnson was joined in St. Bartholomew’s Epis copal Church on Park Avenue by his running mate, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, and their Republican opponents, Sen. Barry Goldwater and Rep. William E.. Miller. ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON—Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower entered Walter Reed Army Hospital Thursday suffering from a “moderately severe” inflammation of his windpipe and the air tubes leading to his lungs. ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON—A Republican task force said Thursday U. S| aid to Latin America’s under developed nations cannot succeed until Cuba is freed from Communist domination with American help. ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON—Secretary of Defense Robert S. Mcnamara predicted Thursday it would be many years before Red China could be able to make a nuclear attack on the United States or its allies. ★ ★ ★ KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Harry S. Truman has left Research Hospital after spending nine days there recovering from injuries suffered in a fall. Texas TYLER—The Tyler Junior College Apache Belles and Apache Band will lead 75 marching units and floats of roses in the 27th annual Texas Rose Festival parade at 10 a.m. in Tyler Saturday. ★ ★ ★ SAN MARCOS—Officials of Southwest Texas State College said Thursday one of their ex-students, President Lyndon Johnson, has tentatively accepted an invitation to speak at the college Nov. 20. ★ ★ ★ SAN ANTONIO—A proposal to allow Negroes membership in the Texas State Teachers Association will be considered during the group’s convention which opened Thursday. sion of it. According to the fable of two generations, the Ca dets returned to A&M, stocked up with artillery stolen from the campus armory, hijacked a train en route to Waco and headed for the central Texas city to oblite rate the school where their buddy had been slain. Texas’ state militia was sum moned to put down the attack and the Aggies were forced to return to Aggieland, and so the story ends. A&M and Baylor didn’t meet again in football until 1931 when the Aggies played host for the first time in the long series. Before that game, The Batta lion editorially welcomed the Baylor students to Aggieland. “We extend a hand of gladness and hospitality to renew our re lations with a sister college . . .” the editorial stated. “Memories of past disagreements are forgot ten.” And they still are today. Stipends Set For Institute Of Statistics The National Institutes of Health has awarded A&M a $180,- 000 grant for a five-year program of the Graduate Institute of Sta tistics, President Earl Rudder an nounced Thursday. The grant is for developing a program in medi cal and biological statistics. “The grant provides essentially for an additional associate profes sor and stipends for graduate stu dents,” Dr. H. O. Hartley said. He directs the Institute. Four trainees already had been named in anticipation of the grant which provides for up to eight trainees at one time as the pro gram develops. Trainees receive stipends of $175 to $225 monthly and can receive this financial sup port for several years. “The trainees major in statis tics with a minor in the biological sciences,” Hartley said. No sti pends will be granted unless the student has a biological minor or a public health minor including veterinary science. ”Our program,” Hartley said, “already had the option of courses in biological statistics for those interested. These courses now will be required for NIH trainees and for the Ph. D students an addition al course in statistical epidemio logy will be newly developed. The trainees will have assign ments as part of their training pro gram at the Institute. CAMPAIGN TRAILS Barry Gives Views On Nationwide TV By The Associated Press Sen. Barry Goldwater presented his views on civil rights in a nationally televised speech Thursday night. It is, he said, a matter of freedom to associate—and freedom not to asso ciate. The Republican presidential candidate’s message was in the form of a taped film of his speech last Saturday night in Chicago. At the end of the program was a taped speech by former Vice President Rich-' ard M. Nixon, urging Gold- water’s election Nov. 3, and a repeat of another brief mes sage from the senator dealing with law and order. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, talk ing of “smear bombshells” yet to come, carried his campaign to Bos ton Thursday after attending the funeral for former President Her bert Hoover in New York City. The Democratic nominee for vice president told a dinner meet ing of the Associated Industries in Massachusetts that the prospect of Sen. Barry Goldwater “at the helm of the U. S. government is enough to give every banker, investor and businessman in the free world nightmares.” Republican Senate candidate George Bush predicted victory to day. “We are winning this race,” he told some 65 East Side business men at a breakfast. He said the polls also have been encouraging. The GOP nominee said many Democrats over the state are help ing him. In the governor’s race, GOP candidate Jack Crichton called attention to Connally’s travels with President Johnson in Missouri and Ohio. “The puppet-governor of Texas has been called out of the state by his boss, Lyndon Johnson, and his absence has left the Texas State Teachers Association with out their publicized featured speaker for their convention open ing session in San Antonio,” said Crichton in a statement. Great Issues To Present Color Films Five color films in the World Knowledge Series, “The World Around Us,” have been announced by the Great Issues Committee. All programs will be in the Memorial Student Center BallA room. Tickets are available in the Student Programs Office. Jerry Stevens, publicity chair man for the Great Issues Commit tee, announced the following sched ule: “Wonders of the Deep,” nar rated by Geza de Rosner, Nov. 18. The film features strange creatures of the deep in action that is “fast, sometimes furious, and often down right funny.” “Inside Castro’s Cuba,” narrated by Robert Cohen, Jan. 13. Cohen was authorized by the U. S. State Department to produce the first full length color documentary on Cuba under Castro. It is billed as eye-opening and thought pro voking. “Timeless Turkey,” narrated by Arthur Dewey, Feb. 18. Dewey shows the transition to the 20th Century in cities of Turkey. “Highlights of Brazil,” narrated by Howard Pollard, March 18. “Escape From Tibet,” narrated by Thubten Jigme Norbu, April 2. Harold Dunn Chosen Chairman Of A&M Research Foundation Shamrock Oil and Gas board chairman J. Harold Dunn of Amarillo was elected Thursday to succeed Raleigh Hortenstine as board chairman of the A&M Re search Foundation. Hortenstine is chairman of the board of Wyatt Metal and Boiler Works of Dallas and Houston. Naming of a new board chair man and the reelection of other officers marked the annual board meeting here of the research foundation. The board reviewed the $2,600,000 worth of research activities administered the past year by the Foundation which serves as contracting agency for research activities involving A&M faculty and staff. Reelected were A&M President Earl Rudder as president of the Foundation board; Dean of En gineering Fred J. Benson, Foun dation vice president and direc tor; Carter Sparger, vice direc tor for oceanigraphic and marine operations; Mrs. Judy Davis, sec retary - treasurer, and C. M. Gaines, attorney. Gaines is a San Antonio resident. The others reside here.