fSIKf self! i® March; 1 i ill HMH Ipill ... «|§ , V \ ■ CAROLYN ANDERSON ■ 11 »#» i - ly FI& f: § fciiiiliilB ppiliiiiiiiiiiilil I®l!®lliMi#ii MELINDA MALONE ■ JANET MTLSON MADELINE WILSON Che Battalion Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1967 Number 418 Junior Class Selects Sweetheart Saturday CAROL AUSTIN BELL Aggieland Accepting Entries anity Fair Contestants jFor V; W Vanitv Fair Vanity Fair entries are now be ing accepted at the Student Pub lications office in the YMCA, an- . \nounced Jack Hammond, editor \:>f the Aggieland ’67. Engineer Classes ITo Be Dismissed [2 Days Next Week AH College of Engineering Jclasses at Texas A&M will be dismissed Tuesday and Wednes- pay to allow maximum faculty [and student participation in the luniversity’s “Engineering for the |l970’s” convocation. In announcing the Executive [Committee decision to suspend [engineering classes during the [two-day convocation, Engineering [Dean Fred Benson said he felt rthe meeting was of such signifi cance that it would provide long- range benefits to all persons par ticipating. Dean Benson pointed out, how ever, that only engineering, arch itecture and industrial education classes are being dismissed. Applications may be picked up at the Student Publications Of fice or in Dorm 18, Room 207. Only seniors may submit entries. Deadline for entering a girl is April 4. A “5 x 7”, or larger photograph must accompany each application. Each applicant must be able to fulfill the following conditions if accepted as a candidate for Van ity Fair: (1) Attend picnic given for all Vanity Fair applicants on April 8. Cost $1.00. (2) If for some reason the candidate cannot be present for the picnic, get in touch with Jack Hammond (18-207 or phone 846-3364) or Bill Crawford (18- 402) to make arrangements for a later meeting with the candidate. (3) Be able to appear on the campus Friday, May 19 at a time and place to be later specified. The Press Club Banquet will be held Friday night. (4) Be able to attend the Sen ior Ring Dance, May 20. (5) Have a picture made on campus for the AGGIELAND ’67. By RANDY PLUMMER Battalion Staff Writer Highlighting the Junior Ball in Sbisa Hall Saturday night will be the selection of the class sweetheart. Candidates for sweet heart were selected by class offi cers earlier this week. The finalists are Janet Wilson, Madeline Wilson, Carolyn Ander son, Melinda Malone and Carol Austin Bell. Miss Janet Wilson, a 19-year- old San Antonio sophomore at the University of Texas, will be es corted by William M. Hughs. A 17-year-old senior at Bryan Adams High School in Dallas, Miss Wilson will be escorted by James H. Averett. Miss Anderson, a 20-year-old sophomore at North Texas State University, will be escorted by B. A. Wolfe. Two Ag Firemen To Go To Memphis Two Firemen’s Training Divi sion representatives of Texas A&M’s Engineering Extension Service will participate in a na tional fire department instruc tors’ conference next week in Memphis, Tenn. Chief instructor Henry D. Smith will speak during a Na tional Fire Protection Commit tee meeting, using training pro grams as his topic. He also will attend a meeting of the Interna tional Society of Fire Service In structors’ board of directors. Top Scientists Gather For Academy Of Science - siS"' N s 'ex* Top scientists from all areas of the state are expected here this weekend for annual meetings of the Texas Academy of Science and affiliated organizations. Registration begins at 2 p.m. Thursday in the A&M Memorial Student Center, announced Dr. Sidney O. Brown, president-elect Weather FRIDAY—Clear to partly cloudy, winds southerly 5 to 10 m.p.h. High 82. Low 54. SATURDAY—Cloudy in morn ing becoming partly cloudy after noon, winds southerly 15 to 25 m.p.h. High 83. Low 59. THIRTY DAY OUTLOOK March 15 to April 15. Forecast temperature much above normal. The normal mean temperature is 63 and the much above 68. The precipitation out look is light to no precipitation and for the 30 days will probably be less than 2% inches. The nor mal rainfall for this 30 day pe riod is about 3% inches. First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings cer tificates. —Adv. of the Texas Academy of Science. THE TEXAS Ornithological Society, the Texas Branch of the Animal Care Panel, and the Texas Society for Electron Micro scopy are meeting jointly with the Texas Academy of Science. Presentations of scientific pa pers Friday and Saturday will be supplemented by major speakers. First speaker on the program is Dr. George H. Lowery Jr., director of the Louisiana State University Museum. His subject is “Bird Migrations on the Texas Coast.” DR. ROBBIN C. Anderson of the University of Texas, presi dent of the Texas Academy of Science, wil speak during a gen eral business sessions of the TAS Friday afternon. “Nuclear Power from the Light Elements—the Problem and the Challenge,” is the 3:30 p.m. Fri- Filing Deadline Is 5 p. m. Friday Deadline for filing for class elections is 5 p.m. Friday. Those interested should go by the Stu dent Programs Office in the Me morial Student Center. day topic of James L. Tuck, Physics Division associate leader at Los Alamos, N. M., Scientific Laboratory. A banquet session Friday night in Sbisa Hall features Dr. New man A. Hall, executive director of the Commission on Engineering Education. DR. KEITH Arnold, ornithol ogy professor at Texas A&M, will speak to the Texas Ornithological Society at 2 p.m. Saturday. He will discuss bird identification techniques, using A&M’s collec tion for demonstrations. A surprise speaker is due to ad dress the Texas Ornithological Society at a Saturday night dinner at the Ramada Inn. Jerry Strickling of Houston, TOS president, will be heard Sunday morning. The Texas Branch of the Animal Care Panel will center attention on the use of primates in research. Dr. J. D. McCrady of A&M’s College of Veterinary Medicine said animal mainten ance facilities, diseases of labora tory animals and proper diet are among phases of the program. Dr. McCrady is president of the TBACP. A senior high school student from Montgomery, Alabama, Miss Bell is 18 years old and will be escorted by Clarence T. Daugh erty. Miss Malone, a 20-year-old resident of Ingram and a junior at Texas Tech, will be escorted by Robert R. Merritt. A reception for the finalists will be given in the YMCA Sat urday at 2:30 p.m. Posts Being Filled For SCONA 13 By BILL ALDRICH Battalion Staff Writer The Student Conference on Na tional Affairs, SCONA, has start ed a personnel drive for next year’s Conference. Applications may be picked up in the Student Program Office. The only qualification is a 1.0 overall grade point ratio and a 1.0 last fall. An important general meeting will be held at 7:30 in the social room of the MSC, announced Carl Feducia, personnel chairman. “SINCE SCONA is financed by private contributions solicited by SCONA members, we will soon be starting the spring fund drive and need new members to help organize the drive and to work on the drive in their hometown area,” Feducia said. “SCONA XIII is already being organized and now is the time to join and help make SCONA XIII as successful as SCONA XII was,” Don McCrory, SCONA pub licity chairman, added. PATRICK G. REHMET, chair man of SCONA XIII, stated, “Our first job for SCONA XIII will be to conduct a fund drive during the Easter break, March 23-27.” He also said Henry Cis neros has accepted the position of finance chairman. “Most of the first meeting will be an organi zational one, with Henry explain ing the Easter and June finance drives.” All Executive Committee mem bers praised this year’s Confer ence as a complete success and were equally optimistic about SCONA XIII. “Partytime U.S.A.” will be the ball theme. The decorations, set up by class volunteers, will com plement the theme. Neal Ford and the Fanatics will provide the music. A banquet, beginning at 6:30 p.m., will precede the ball which starts at 8:30. Tickets, now on sale at the Student Programs Office in the Memorial Student Center, cost $2 per person for the banquet and $3 per couple for the ball. Uniform for the banquet will be midnights and for the ball midnights with battle scarfs. Dress will be semi-formal for ci vilian students. “Everyone connected with the ball has put in a lot of effort to make this the best dance A&M has ever had,” John Daly class social secretary, said. Overpass Opening Set For Tuesday Formal opening of the College Station underpass on F. M. Road 60 has been set for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, announced District Highway Engineer Joe G. Han over of Bryan. State Highway Engineer D. C. Greer of Austin will be featured speaker for the ceremonies dedi cating the $1 million project on the north side of the Texas A&M campus. Additional remarks will be made by A&M President Earl Rudder, Brazos County Judge W. C. Davis, College Station Mayor D. A. Anderson and officials for the Southern Pacific and Missouri Pacific railroads. The ceremonies also will in clude the Aggie Band and a unique ribbon-cutting. I the outside world l VIETNAM Henry Cabot Lodge is resigning as ambassador to South Vietnam, said President Johnson, making the sur prise announcement in a speech to the Tennessee Legis lature. Veteran diplomat Ellsworth Bunker will take over in Saigon. The scope of U. S. air raids on North Vietnam rose, and field deployment of American troops in the South increased, as the monsoon clouds began to thin out. The generals who rule South Vietnam and the men who are writing a new Constitution face an early show down on how to achieve an elected government this year. NATIONAL Perry Raymond Russo, who testified he heard Lee Harvey Oswald and two other man plot to assassinate President Kennedy, said on cross-examination that he under went psychiatric treatment in 1959 and 1960. WASHINGTON ’ Sen. Thomas J. Dodd’s former bookkeeper told the Senate Ethics Committee that the Connecticut Democrat arranged to draw $6,000 from testimonial funds when pressed by the government to pay back taxes. The House Ways and Means Committee approved Presi dent Johnson’s proposal for restoring business tax incenti- tives, but made it more liberal than the White House recommended. The body of President John F. Kennedy was trans ferred in secrecy to its final resting place and his widow placed a small bouquet of lilies of the valley on the black fnarble slab at the memorial service. INTERNATIONAL A friend of Stalin’s daughter said he believes she defected because of “a desperate longing for freedom — to meet people she wanted, to live the life she desired.” West Germany agreed to buy half a billion dollars worth of U. S. government bonds to help offset costs of keeping troops in Germany. TEXAS The widow of Lee Harvey Oswald said in an interview that she never knew any of the men accused in New Orleans of conspiring with Oswald to kill President Kennedy. Early efforts to postpone the city sales tax issue failed, but a Texas senator said he plans to make it a long, drawn-out fight. ‘Old Army’ Movie Scheduled Friday The most popular movie at Texas A&M is scheduled for a benefit presentation Friday night at Guion Hall. “We’ve Never Been Licked,” which depicts student life dur ing the days of the real “Old Army,” is set for 7:30. Proceeds are to go to the Memorial Student Center Travel Committee’s overseas scholarship and loan program. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M” —Adv. “A MODERN DILEMMAMA” Aggie Players Cynthia Smith and Paul Ste- Fuller. The play will be presented tonight wart enact a scene from the comedy, “A and Friday night in the Fallout Theater. Modem Dilemmama,” written by Hollynn (Photo by Russell Autrey)