Corps Of Cadets Review Kicks Off Space Fiesta REVIEWING PARTY SPACE FIESTA ’67 BEGINS Space Fiesta ’67 officially opened Monday with a review of the Corps Visitors and Aggie delegates look at one of more than 30 exhibits in the of Cadets. Honored guest was Dr. Kurt Debus. (Photos by Russell Autrey) ninth annual Space Fiesta which began Monday and continue through Friday. DEBUS SPEAKS Dr. Kurt Debus, director of the John F. Kennedy Space Center, speaks in the first Space Fiesta presentation Monday night. Cbe Battalion Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1967 Number 424 ^!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!ll!llli I the outside worldl WASHINGTON Secretary of Defense McNamara launched a secret study of profits flowing from the Pentagon’s multi-billion dollar spending. A Presidential package of tax reforms has been shaped, but it’s not a drastic overhaul and it can’t be enacted before 1968. NATIONAL Space Social Technology Seen Change Catalyst The prosecutor detailed, step by step, how eight stu dent nurses were slain as a jury of seven men and five women began hearing the murder case against Richard Speck. The task of selecting a jury started as Dr. Carl Coppo- line went on trial on a charge of murder for the second time in less than six months. The threat of a trucking strike eased, at least tempo rarily, as negotiators recessed so union representatives could attend a funeral. VIETNAM Allied forces range along the South Vietnamese coast in operations designed to secure roads and drive the Com munists away from food. INTERNATIONAL COTTON PAGEANT ROYALTY Esther Jane Grant of Bryan was crowned of Bryan, reigned as King Cotton. (Photo Queen Cotton at Texas A&M’s 33rd Cotton by Russell Autrey) Pageant Saturday night. Jim McAfee, also B-CS Holds Elections Today For Eight City Councilmen Five Bryan commissioners and three College Station councilmen will be elected today in city council elections in each city. In Bryan, seven persons have filed for the commissioner of fice. They are Mrs. Lawrence Parker, Harmon Bell, Jerome G. Zubik, John R. Naylor, A. W. Davis, Ray F. Downey and J. D. Four coeds from Texas Wo mans’ University will begin the first of the YMCA’s “Man Your Manners” programs tonight at 7:30. The coeds will be discussing “How to Get Along With People.” The group will include last year’s Aggie sweetheart, Cheri First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings cer tificates, —Adv. Conlee. The last five names are the incumbents. In College Station, there is only one ward where the incumbent is being challenged. Nolan Wil liamson is the opponent of in cumbent Bill Cooley in the Ward 1. Ward II Councilman Robert R. Rhodes and Ward III Coun cilman Antone L. Rosprim are Holland, who is also the presi dent of the Student Council of Social Activities at T.W.U. Also on the panel will be Kathy Heldman, Pat Calliham, and Jill Anderson. The discussion will cover let ter writing, flowers, introduc tions, dances and telephone man ners. The program will con clude with a question and ans wer session. running unopposed, although Col lege Station Mayor D. A. Ander son has announced an active write-in candidate is at work in one of the wards. The polls will be open until 7 p.m. Mayor Anderson also an nounced that free transportation will be provided for College Sta tion voters through the College Station Cab Company. Anyone needing a ride should call 846- 6777. The Jaycees have been heading an active get-out-the-vote cam paign in Bryan, reminding the citizens of the “multi-million dol lar business” of city government. Polling places in Bryan are at the two fire stations, and in Col lege Station at the A&M Con solidated High School music room (Ward I), the College Hills Ele mentary School (Ward II), and at city hall (Ward III). ‘Manners’ Panel Is Tonight U.S. Space Policy Lauded By Debus Vice President Humphrey conferred with British lead ers, lectured Americans and defended U. S. Vietnamese policies before students. British troops fought a day-long battle against sniping and bomb-throwing Arab terrorists in Aden. A pilot who survived 58 days alone in the artic greeted his rescuers “as if he were waiting for a bus’’ and his watch was only 10 minutes off the correct time. TEXAS Dallas police arrested a Cuban exile on a warrant from the New Orleans district attorney. Coolege coordinating board approved a new state dental school for Dallas and a medical school for Houston. Voters will decide various hot issues in city-wide bal loting Tuesday in most Texas cities. Porter, Griffin Are Elected To School Board Saturday By BOB BORDERS Battalion News Editor Technological competition along the lines of space exploration may lead to the eventual reor ganization of world social order. This was the observation of Kurt H. Debus, director of the John F. Kennedy Space Center, as he addressed an audience as sembled for the first in a series of Space Fiesta presentations Monday night. “We will eventually move to a level of technological competi tion,” Debus said. “This may help us in avoiding involvements in war. This is something long wait ed for and hoped for,” he added. Debus emphasized the fact that the United States chose to oper ate its space program completely in the open. He said this has Class Elections Are Set Thursday For All Students Student class elections will be held Thursday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the basement of the Memorial Student Center. A total of 109 students have filed for class offices and yell leader positions. The class of ’70 leads all ballots, with 42 names submitted for five offices. The candidates will have a chance to air their views before the student body at 5 p.m. rally today on the steps of Guion Hall. Any of the candidates for any office are eligible to make a “stump speech.” Ten juniors and 13 sophomores have filed for senior yell leader positions. Three seniors and two juniors will be elected from the 23 candidates. In the race for class president, the juniors have five choices while the sophomore class has seven and the freshmen 10. Weather WEDNESDAY—Foggy in morn ing, clear to partly cloudy in aft ernoon, winds southerly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 87. Low 68. THURSDAY—Foggy in morning, clear to partly cloudy in after noon, winds southerly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 92. Low 68. 5% per year paid on all savings at Bryan Build- B B & L. ing & Loan Association. Adv. come to make every citizen feel that the space achievements are really his. “The very fact that we con ducted our program in the open has won us friends,” Debus said. “Another milestone was the agreement that we shall not take possession of territory in space,” he added. Debus quoted President John son as recently saying the pur pose of the American people in the space age shall be unchanged, and “we will welcome all men to join us in this space effort that makes use of what this nation has developed.” “We have released the imagi nation of men that was not there before, and we have kindled a spark of adventure that wasn’t there before,” Debus said. Debus outlined briefly the prog ress the United States has made in its space efforts. He said space endeavor started with the ballistic missile. Debus himself was instrumental in the launching of the first U. S. mis sile, a Redstone, in 1953. From this, we went to the un manned space probe. A slide presentation was then shown, with slides depicting the (See Space Technology, Page 3) Dr. Russell Alan Porter and incumbent Bob J. Griffin were elected to the A&M Consolidated School Board Saturday in an ex tremely tight race. Both Griffin and the other in cumbent, Leslie Palmer, tallied the same number of votes, 287, throwing doubt into the proce dure for determining the other member of the board. The problem was resolved Mon day when Palmer withdrew from the race. The fourth candidate was Pie ter Groote, who received 231 votes in the light turnout. Ballots were counted twice Sat urday night by election judge Dr. Luther J. Jones and his assist ants, both times coming out with the tie between Griffin and Pal mer. Superintendent W. T. Riedel stated that if the votes had come out the same at a third counting Monday morning, the matter would have required a special run-off election. State law re quires such an election, unless another way is decided upon by the candidates. Palmer said he withdrew from the race for personal reasons. He added, “I will continue to support the Board of Trustees and the school administration as I have in the past in order to provide the children of our community with the best program of educa tion possible.” University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M” —Adv. SINGING CADETS TOUR Several members of the Singing- Cadets dis- of San Marcos and San Antonio. See story, embark from their bus during one of the page four, many stops they made during a recent tour . jifn.jiwnp 1 JiraiiWilluM t I