Runoff Candidate Want to state your qualifications, or proposals? Write a letter to Sound Off of not more than 16 typewritten, double spaced lines before 5 p. m. Monday. Che Battalion Weather £: SATURDAY — Mostly cloudy, winds g: southerly 15 to 25 m.p.h. High 83. :£ S: Low fi8. £: SUNDAY — Cloudy, chance of few g: thunder storms late afternoon, winds :g ig southerly 15 to 25 mp.p.h. High 86. :g Low. 71. g: Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1967 Number 427 Large Student Turnout Elects Eight Officers 13 Offices Await Thursday Run-Off iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin I the outside worldl NATIONAL A financier’s son was kidnapped from his Beverly Hills home, ransomed for $250,000 and returned unharmed after three days in the hands of his abductors. Richard Speck’s lawyer questioned a Philippine nurse’s account of the night of terror in an effort to find detail that will support the defense in the mass killing trial. Cameramen and technicians have boycotted major networks as the AFTRA strike grows. Studios are striv ing to carry on but home television reception has been affected. Without giving a reason, the prosecutor dismissed an expert chemist as a potential juror in the trial of Dr. Carl Coppolino, who has been charged with murdering his wife with an exotic drug. VIETNAM Communist troops smashed at U. S. and Vietnamese posts in Quang Tri, near the DMZ, and freed more than 200 presoners from the provincial jail. Gen. Creighton W. Abrams Jr., who used to lead his tanks into battle crying “Attack! Attack! Attack!” has been picked by President Johnson to be the No. 2 com mander in Vietnam. INTERNATIONAL Vice President Humphrey renewed the U. S. pledge to defend West Berlin during a visit marked by the deten tion of youthful lefists accused of plotting to kill him. WASHINGTON The House Rules Committee voted to create a perman ent House Ethics Committee with authority to recommend changes needed to enforce standards of conduct. TEXAS The federal government has filed a claim of $45,637.43 for back taxes against Jack Ruby, who killed Lee Harvey Oswald. Titan II Missile Is Featured ’67 Space Fiesta Attraction Space Fiesta ’67 at Texas A&M has a dazzling display of attrac tions for today. One of the major attractions is a Titan II missile which has been converted into a traveling exhibit. It will be exhibited on the parking lot behind the A&M Memorial Student Center. SPECTATORS will see the Air Force missile story told in slides and films while standing inside an actutal ICB'M. A dis play case of large, scale models shows the growth of missiles Four Suspended In Marijuna Case Four Texas A&M students were suspended from school Thursday for “suspected connec tion with or use of marijuana,” announced Associate Dean of Students Bennie Zinn. Zinn said no formal charges have been filed against the stu dents. The action followed the arrest and school suspension Wednes day of Robert R. Burnside, a freshman from Torrance, Calif., who was charged in Bryan with possession and sale of marijuana. Burnside was released later in the day after posting $2,500 bond. A freshman coed was among the students suspended Thursday. Two of the other students were also classified as freshmen and one as a junior. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M” —Adv. from Thor to Titan IIIC. A three dimensional diorama shows the underground complex of a Titan ICBM site. The missile is displayed in a horizontal position to allow the public a complete and close in spection. Another highlight of the day will be an 8 p.m. program in the MSC Ballroom featuring the U. S. Air Force Aerospace Presentations Team from the Air University at Maxwell AFB, Ala. THE TEAM includes Lt. Col. James S. Wall, Major Dannie R. Hoskins and Capt. David L. Fred rick. Featured in the program will be color slides and motion pictures of various phases of the U. S. space program. Harry Britt, Space Fiesta chairman, said the team will out line cooperative efforts of NASA and the Department of Defense in the national space program. THE AEROSPACE story stresses that America’s space ef fort is directed toward insur ing peace. Team members will discuss their visits with astro nauts and inspections of Mer cury, Gemini and Appollo cap sules, plus their experiences in operating simulated spacecraft. Now in its third year as a full time operation, the presentations team makes hundreds of lectures each year to educational, civic and scientific groups. BRITT estimated that 20,000 persons have toured Space Fiesta exhibits this week in the MSC. He said exhibits will remain on public display through Satur day. AT THE POLLS One of the largest number of students in in Thursday’s class elections. Runoffs will several years turned out to cast their votes be next Thursday. (Photo by Russell Autrey) Air ROTC Detachment To Send Group To Air Base A&M’s Air Force ROTC de tachment will send 70 cadets and several officers on a field trip to Tinker Air Force Base, Okla., April 13-15. Maj. L. J. Magers of the de tachment said the cadets will be selected from the freshman and junior classes. Applicants must have a minimum grade point ratio of 1.0, and those who have not been on any previous trips will be given priority, he added. Applications are being taken in Four Are Injured In Train Collision At Waco Rail Yard WACO, Tex. <-dP) — A Missouri Pacific freight train and a Mis- souri-Kansas-Texas switch en gine collided headon in the Bell- meade yards Thursday night in juring four men. Railroad officials at the scene said the Missouri Pacific train, five diesel engines and 90 freight cars, was on the M-K-T tracks when the accident occurred. Engineer M. L. Blount, 57, of the MP train said the block sig nal indicated he had the right of way when the collision occurred. One of the injured, Blount was not believed in serious condition. He is a resident of Mart, Tex. The most seriously injured was David M. Henry, 61, of Mart, also an MP crewman. He was taken to Hillcrest Hospital here. The other injured, both from Mart and both MP crewmen, were Ralph Garland, 49, and Burt Davidson, 45. Davidson was treat ed at a Waco hospital and re leased Garland was not believed seriously hurt. None of the switching crew was reported in jured. Railroad officials said it had not been determined whether a switch was open or had been acci dentally thrown. Investigations by both railroads were in prog- air science classes. PURPOSE OF the trip, Mag ers explained, is “to familiarize future Air Force officers with the inner workings, logistics, maintenance, computers, and everything else connected with Air Force supply.” Magers said Maj. Melvin F. McNickle, commander of the Oklahoma City Air Material Area, based at Tinker, is spon soring the trip. “WE ASKED him what he though about the trip during his visit here earlier this month,” Magers explained, “and he en dorsed the idea.” McNickle was a reviewing officer at Spring Military Weekend here. In addition, Magers said Col. G. N. Patton of the base is co ordinating plans with Col. Ver non Head, professor of Aerospace studies at A&M. Patton’s son, Neal, is commander of the Third Wing of the Corps of Cadets. A C-124, cargo plane, has been reserved by the Air Force to carry the cadets. PLANS ARE to depart Easter- wood Airport April 13 at 2 p.m. The group will return late Sat urday, April 15. Detachment personnel accom panying the cadets include Head, Lt. Col. Philip Hopkins, and Magers. By LEE MORENO Battalion Managing Editor Casting 2,101 votes, students at Texas A&M elected eight to of fice in class elections Thursday. Neal W. Adams, William Mich ael Bagget and Wayne Porter were elected senior yell leaders for 1967-68. Adams received 273 votes; Bagget, 390; and Porter, 252. Robert Segner was elected junior yell leader with 163 votes. A runoff between Charles E. Holt Jr. and Bernard Dawson will de cide the second junior yell leader. Each had 138 votes. KENNETH M. ROBINSON de feated Peter John Isani for senior social secretary, 357 to 196. Joseph Paul Webber was elect ed senior class MSC representa tive. He won over Michael C. Kostelnik 370 to 192. Junior class secretary will be Billy Jack Youngkin. He swept over George H. Rau Jr., 405 to 187. Davis G. Mayes fielded 334 votes to defeat Robert Ernest Easley for junior MSC represen tative. Easley had 220 votes. The remaining 13 class offices will be decided in a runoff elec tion Thursday, said Jack Myers, election committee chairman. Myers was pleased with the voter turnout. “THESE ARE the most votes I’ve seen cast since I’ve been here,” Myers observed. “There was a crowd here about 10 minutes after 8 a.m. and it lasted all day. This shows that students are taking more interest in their class leaders,” he pointed out. Myers urged all students to vote in the runoff. The polls will be open from 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. in the basement of the MSC. Sanford T. Ward and William Ronald McLeroy will face each other for president of the class of ’68. Ward received 232 votes and McLeroy, 208. RUNNING FOR vice president are Richard L. Gummer and Maurice Main. Main captured 196 votes to Gummer’s 102. In the race for senior secretary- treasurer are Robert Nordhaus and Charles Joyner who received 212 and 148 votes, respectively. Vying for senior class historian are Kenneth Kennerly and Mich ael Lanning who stood at 218 to 175 Thursday. In the runoff for the class of 1969 are the following: Daniel Ruiz Jr and John G. Adami Jr. are up for president. Ruiz mustered 170 votes to Adami’s 112. Beverly Early Davis and James R. Horner are competing for vice president. Davis had 229 votes to Horner’s 151. ON THE BALLOT for social secretary are Dennis Fontana with 148 votes; William McKean Jr. with 200. Holt and Dawson will fight it out for junior yell leader. Run-off candidates for the class of ’70 are as follows: Ronald Adams with 172 votes will seek to defeat Gerald Geist- weidt with 158 for president. Running for vice president are John L. Cassell Jr. with 166 and Nokomis Jackson Jr. wtih 109. The job of secretary-treasurer will go to either John D. Cunning ham with 194 or Richard Oran Love with 152. JAMES ST. JOHN III and Car- roll Leo Cawley Jr. are seeking the office of social secretary. St. John had 159 votes to Cawley’s 131. MSC representative will be be tween Barry W. Bauerschlag and Dean T. Eshelman. Bauerschlag took 178 votes to Eshelman’s 169. Russian Chorus, Dancers Perform As Town Hall Act Serge Jaroff’s Original Don Cossack Chorus and Dancers will appear in concert here April 19. The ensemble of 24 uniformed white Russian giants, recently re turned from Europe, is in the midst of its 35th annual coast-to- coast tour of the United States and Canada. Sam Pearson, chairman of the sponsoring Memorial Student Center Town Hall Committee, said season tickets and student activity cards are acceptable for the 8 p.m. performance in G. Rollie White Coliseum. LED BY THE four-foot, ten- inch Serge Jaroff, the chorus and dancers’ repertoire includes Russian church music, plus sold ier and folk ditties of exaltation, whimsey, power and joy. Jaroff formed the group in 1923, putting into effect early training as a choirmaster. The Chorus’s debut concert was given in Vienna July 4. Its first tour of the United States was made during the winter of 1930. Since then, the Chorus has toured the U. S. every season except 1965- 66. CRITICS OFTEN write of the wide range of voices in the Cossack Chorus. The basses can descend to A below low C and the tenors can hit G above high C. And the singers also can do whistles, cat-calls and girlish laughter, and can simulate the sound of horses’ hoofs by cluck ing their tongues. Jaroff’s directing style is uni que, Pearson commented. With his back to an audience, Jaroff does not seem to be conducting at all. There are no displays of flailing arms. Holding his hands close to his chest, Jaroff points a finger, turns a palm up or down, lifts an eyebrow frowns or smiles to get trigger responses from his men. MISSILE DISPLAYED HERE A Titain II missile went on display today griant missile has been converted and will remain on campus throug-h Tues- traveling- exhibit, day. A part of the Space Fiesta ’67, the into Civilian Housing Sign-Up Begins Beginning Monday at 8 p.m., civilian students who expect to live in dormitories next year may report to the Housing Office and reserve their rooms, according to Allen M. Madeley, housing man ager. Ramps G, H, I, and J of Hart Hall will be occupied by the Corps of Cadets. From 8 a.m. Thursday through 5 p.m. Friday, students living in these ramps may reserve civilian rooms not previously reserved. All students who do not re serve their rooms by April 28 may sign up on a first-come, first-serve basis, beginning May 1. 5% per year paid on all savings at Bryan Bulld- bb&l ing & Loan Assn. Adv. A&M Nuclear Engineering Matures As Field Of Study By RICHARD CAMPBELL Battalion Special Writer Of the many new and challeng ing fields of study beginning to open up at Texas A&M, one — nuclear engineering — has begun to mature. At its conception in 1959, the Department of Nuclear Engi neering was a small and strug gling one. It had a limited fac ulty and an almost minute stu dent enrollment. But since that time it has started to progress at a fantastic rate by adding new facilities and competent profes sors. ALTHOUGH Texas A&M has offered master’s and doctoral studies in nuclear engineering since the beginning, it made one of the biggest strides in the field only this past fall. In September, the university initiated an under graduate degree in nuclear engi neering, the state’s first. The university has also made other strides to improve the de partment. First, administrators felt they needed an outstanding leader for the department and they got one. His name is Dr. Robert G. Cochran and he comes well-qualified. He graduated from the University of Indiana in 1948, got his master’s in 1950 and then went on to Pennsylvania State for his doctorate in 1957. He also worked as a group leader at the famous Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tenn. Backing up Dr. Cochran is another man hand picked to teach at A&M. He is Dr. Robert S. Wick, formerly with the Westinghouse Founda tion and the only other full pro fessor in the department. DRS. WALTER H. KOHLER and Donald E. Emon are both as sistant professors and carry most of the teaching load. Probaoly (See Nuclear Engineering, Page 3) First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings cer tificates. —Adv. tm*. fe'W'fr w "•vrs* fc± c-< fcii: t