idle 10E CES ""tTOlu,, Che Battalion :$ Saturday — Clear, winds, northeast- erly 10-15. High 53, low 37. :::: :$ Sunday — Clear, winds, easterly 10- g: 15. High 58, low 41. Arkansas — Clear, 50° kickoff time, i:-: £: humidity 40% winds northeast at 10 £: m.p.h. VOLUME 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1967 Number 497 I Ip Romney Cancels CBS Appearance LANSING, Mich. (AP) _ Gov. orge Romney, a presidential pirant, said Thursday he has nceled a half hour’s national levision time on the Columbia oadcasting System because of strictions imposed by the net- ork. “These restrictions would have, | effect, made it mandatory that announce to a single network to weeks in advance that I had ached an affirmative decision ncerning seeking the nomina- )edication Set Vext Month clotron IVor Cycl M Texas A&M will formally dedi- “ late its new $6 million cyclotron omplex Dec. 4. P ■ Whitney A. McFarlin, associate 9 I irector of A&M’s Cyclotron In- I titute, said several top govern- I lent officials and representatives B f the nation’s scientific commun- ;y will participate in the cere- nonies. The Texas A&M Cyclotron— inly one in the Southwest—will e used for nuclear particle re- earch and for biomedical and Vi ngineering investigations. J x r * w 1 i 1 CitlO 4- V-w» 300 5 9' 9 Conceived in 1962, the cyclo- ron project was officially begun n April, 1964, with a $3 million tomic Energy Commission ;rant. The State of Texas fur- lished $2 million for construction if the building and the Robert A. ^elch Foundation of Houston irovided a $1 million grant for aboratories and equipment. A&M scientists created the cy clotron's first beam of nuclear jartifles in August. Additional mgineering and testing have pro- •eeded on schedule to put the ma- :hine in full operation next nonth, McFarlin said. The A&M cyclotron is consid ered a third-generation machine, wolving from the first successful ievice of its kind created in 1931. Incorporating design dictated by Einstein’s theory of relativity, the A&M cyclotron can accelerate numerous types of nuclear par ticles to extremely high speeds. It can accelerate protons, for ex ample, to energies of from six to 60 million electron volts. Other particles can be accelerated to more than 100 million electron volts. McFarlin explained that it is ty bombarding various materials with particles that scientists learn more about the nature of the atom’s nucleus. 31 4ft Deadline Nears In B-CS Vote First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings certif- kates. —Adv. Prof To Head Teachers Meet Tuesday is the deadline for vot ing absentee in the Nov. 11 elec tion, remind Bryan-College Sta tion Chamber of Commerce offi cials who are urging passage of Amendment No. 6. Don Dillon, the chamber’s civic vice president, notes election day is also the opening of deer season. He urges hunters to vote absen tee. Passage of Amendment 6 would allow non-elective state officers and employees, including person nel at state-supported institutions such as Texas A&M, to serve in other non-elective state and fed eral positions. Specifically, approval of the amendment would permit faculty members at state - supported schools to accept invitations to serve on non-paying federal and state advisory boards. A&M President Earl Rudder pointed out that many of these advisory boards control allocation of large research and develop ment grants and are often instru mental in determining location of federal facilities. Texas, Rudder observed, is at a distinct disadvantage in obtain ing such funds and facilities be cause it has no representation on the boards. Texas is one of the few states prohibiting service on such hoards. The provision against such service dates back to 1876. Mansfield Plans Fort Worth Talk W. B. Mansfield, chief instruc tor for the Supervision Develop ment Division of Texas A&M’s Engineering Extension Service, will be in Fort Worth Wednesday to address the Safety Council of Fort Worth and Tarrant County. Mansfield’s talk, scheduled dur ing the council’s 23rd annual In dustrial Institute, is titled, “The Importance of Continuous Train ing Programs in Industrial Safe ty Departments.” Adams Announces Plans tion” of the Republican party for president, Romney said. ROMNEY ADDED that he would say “in the near future” whether he will seek the nomina tion, but he did not say when or how he would make his decision known. The Michigan chief executive had said he intended to use the time on national TV to report to the nation on “ a matter of im portance.” He had indicated this would include his views on vio lence that wracked some of the nation’s urban areas last summer. There had been widespread speculation that Romney would use the television time which had been scheduled for Nov. 15, to announce his candidacy for the nomination. “A DECISION whether or not to become a candidate should be conveyed first to all the American people at one time through media simultaneously and equally,” Romney said. “This is what I intend to do in the near future.” He did not elaborate. In New York, Thomas H. Daw son, president of the CBS tele vision network, said in a state ment: “We wish to make it clear that from the very commencement of our negotiations with his repre sentatives we were told that he desired network television time in order to announce his candi dacy. “WE WOULD NOT otherwise have entertained his request for broadcast time.” CBS also released the text of a letter it said was addressed Oct. 27 to Ralph Davis in the Detroit office of McCann-Erick- son, Inc. The letter outlined a CBS policy that, in the area of controversial issues, only political candidates may buy television time. Other wise any such programs must be produced under the direction- and control of the network. “Both these policies,” the letter added, “would make it impossible for us to sell time to Gov. Romney —or, of course, to Messrs. Nixon, Reagan or any other person— unless his appearance is as a candidate.” For Work On ’67 Bonfire Preliminary Cuts OS Set Next Week FOREIGN STUDENT ADVISORS Mrs. Earl Rudder greets foreign student advisors from colleges in the South and South west at a reception Thursday afternoon at the Rudders’ home. The advisors are at A&M in connection with the regional meeting of the National Association for Foreign Student Affairs, which continues today. Foreign Students ’ Problems To Be Discussed Tonight By JOHN McCARROLL Once again, the Aggies are out to build one of the most impres sive stacks of spirit that has ever hit the Southwest Conference. This year, thousands of Cadets and gung-ho civilians will meet in the woods east of Bryan to cut and begin hauling millions of board feet of logs to the Bonfire site on the Air Force Drill Field. BECAUSE OF the A&M-Rice game scheduled for the weekend preceding the Bonfire, work will begin early on the huge stack. Cutting and hauling will begin on Saturday morning, Nov. 11. “Last year we had a 65 foot stack—this year we hope to have one at l^ast 85 feet,” Neal Adams, head yell leader, said. Tbe centerpole will arrive at the stacking site on Nov. -4, and will go up on the following day. Actual stacking will begin at noon on Nov. 16, and will con tinue until the night of the Bon fire on Nov. 22. “UNDERCLASSMEN will be permitted to work on the Bonfire for four days only. They can work only on Nov. 11, 12, 19, and 20,” he continued. Juniors and Seniors who do not have classes on the afternoons of Nov. 9, 10, 16, and 17 may go to the cutting area to perform preparatory work including some preliminary wood cutting. On Nov. 11, 12, 19, and 20, at 6 a.m. Cadets will meet in the stacking area behind Duncan Mess Hall to board trucks to travel to the cutting area. Meals will be served on these days at 5:30 a.m., 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., and 7 p.m. ACCORDING TO Adams, out fit jobs have been assigned as follows: Cutting area — A-l, B-l, C-l, D-l, E-l, F-l, G-l, B-2, D-2, E-2, Sqd. 1, Sqd. 2, Sqd. 4, Sqd. 5, Sqd. 7, Sqd. 8, Sqd. 10, and Sqd. 11. Loading area—Sqd. 3, Sqd. 6, and Sqd. 9. Stacking area—A-2, C-2, and F-2. Unloading will be handled by the Maroon and White Band. For the first time the civilians will be an integral part of the Bonfire. While the Corps makes the trip to Houston for the game with Rice, the “non-regs” will continue with stacking and secur ity measures under the supervi sion of Tommy Osburn. “We need everybody we can get this year,” Adams said. “This is the year the civilians can make a name for themselves; we are ex pecting about five or six hundred to show up.” Problems of foreign students in American Universities and col leges will be probed Friday at Texas A&M by delegates attend ing a regional meeting of the Na tional Association for Foreign Student Affairs and the Institute of International Education. Dr. Paul Hensarling of Texas A&M University will become chairman of the annual Texas Conference on Teacher Education in San Antonio this weekend. Hensarling, Education Depart ment head, became vice chairman at the 1966 conference in Dallas. He will succeed Frank L. Will iams, assistant superintendent of Dallas schools. The 20th conference will con vene state college and university education personnel with state and federal officials for scrutiny of teacher education problems. Keynote speakers of the three- day meeting are Dr. Jack K. Williams, commissioner on higher education of the Texas College and University System Coordinat ing Board; Dr. Wayne O. Reed, associate commissioner for feder al-state relations, U. S. Office of Education; Dr. Robert B. How- sam, University of Texas Educa tion Association’s Center for the Study of Instruction. Hensarling will preside at gene- al assemblies Monday and parti cipate in Tuesday business and planning committee meetings. Also involved in the conference are A&M education professors Dr. Roger L. Harrell and Dr. Lester S. Richardson. Harrell is chair man, Richardson consultant of round table discussions. The three-day conference open ed Thursday at the Ramada Inn with a talk by Marita T. Houli han, coordinator for student activ ities, Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs, U. S. State De partment. Miss Houlihan praised univer sity and college officials through out the nation for sharp evalua tion of needs of foreign students. She noted that only four per cent of support granted foreign stu dents is used for administration. DR. GEORGE W. Kunze, asso ciate dean of A&M’s Graduate College, traced the growth of for eign student enrollment at A&M from 63 in 1950 to 602 in 1967. Dean Kunze predicted contin ued growth of foreign student programs in the United States and praised A&M’s foreign stu dent advisor, Robert L. Melcher, as one of the most efficient and capable men in the profession. Forty-five persons participated in the opening session, but the registration total was expected to climb to 75 by Friday. Delegates were honored Thurs day evening with a reception at ‘Streetcar Named Desire’ Set For Six-Night Guion Hall Run The major fall production of the Aggie Players, “A Streetcar Named Desire,” opens Wednesday for a six-night run in Guion Hall. Performances are set for 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday and Monday and Tuesday, an nounced C. K. Esten, director. Leading roles in the Tennessee Williams’ play belong to Sandra Rose, senior education major of Bryan; Kirk Stewart, graduate English major from Axtell; Ruth Reeves, freshman psychology major from Bryan; and Jim Wey- henmeyer, a sophomore education major from Livingston, N. J. Others in the cast are Roger Killingsworth, senior architecture major from Chattanooga, Tenn.; Cynthia Smith, senior physical education major from College Station; Rene Saenz, senior edu cation major from Austin; Ron ald Becker, sophomore physical education major from San An tonio; Thelma McGill, freshman education major from Bryan; Randy Teipel, senior English major from Bryan, and Kathleen Heaton, a teacher in College Sta tion Schools. Miss Heaton also is stage manager for the play. The play centers around activi ties of the Kowalski family which lives on a street named Elysian Fields in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Blanche DuBois, central char acter of the play, comes to the home of her sister, Stella Kowal ski, after being fired from her teaching position in Laurel for moral misconduct. A stereotyped Southern Belle, Blanche lives in a world of illusion. The hard reality of the Kowalski house hold coupled with Blanche’s al ready shaken emotional and men tal condition, lead to her ultimate downfall. The production staff includes Harry Gooding, set design; Kirk Stewart, set construction; Chick Rose, sound; Jean Reyna and Cynthia Smith, lights; Thelma McGill and Jean Malone, proper ties; Linda Bloom, costumes, and Nancy Wick, house. the home of A&M President and Mrs. Earl Rudder. They also were the honorees at a barbecue later in the evening at Shiloh Hall. FRIDAY’S SPEAKERS include Kendric N. Marshall, Student Fin ancial Aid Division, U. S. De partment of Health, Education and Welfare; Dr. Howard A. Cut ler, executive vice president, In stitute of International Educa tion; and Dr. Lannes H. Hope, counseling psychologist, Texas A&M. A Friday buffet luncheon will feature a talk by Tracy S. Park Jr., research director for Tennes see Gas Pipeline Company, Da vid H. Gillard, director of pro grams at American Friends of the Middle East, will speak during an afternoon session. Friday’s slate also includes a banquet with entertainment by the Singing Cadets of Texas A&M. A series of panels concerning immigration, admissions, com munity participation and U. S. study programs abroad are plan ned Friday afternoon. A workshop will close the con ference Saturday morning. Air Force Display To Be Moved To Campus Sites This Month An Air Force display depicting* development of air power through models and pictures will be exhib ited at various locations at Texas A&M during the next month. Assembled by Aerospace Stud ies 300 class, the exhibit has been in the Memorial Student Center and is scheduled for the Military Science Department annex next. “We plan to set it up in other locations on campus,” noted Paul Mebane of San Antonio, project student chief. ment spectrum. Working with Mebane in ar ranging and moving the display are John Williams of San An tonio, Doug Vasilchin, Tampa, Fla.; Bob Sikes, Fort Worth; Dan McCauley, Brookshire; Miles Sawyer, Burnet; Don Linnen, Longview, and Bud Welch, Shep pard AFB. They are AS 300 cadets of Maj. Charles W. Haney. “It’s a motivational display and we won’t mind if it has some re cruiting value too,” commented the junior aerospace engineering major. Models and photographs in the display are contributed by stu dents and the Trigon. Develop ment from the Wright brothers’ ship to the B-70 is portrayed. The display includes a leather World War I flying helmet. Models of the era simulate a “dog fight.” A flying suit, models of the U. S. missile arsenal and the Ti tan II, Gemini spacecraft booster, TTI Staffer Goes To Florida Meet Dr. Bob M. Gallaway, Materials and Construction Department head of the Texas Transportation Institute at Texas A&M Univer sity, is in Ocala, Fla., today for a professional meeting. Gallaway, who spoke this week at the University of Illinois in Urbana, will join in committee meetings of the American Society of Testing Materials. peg the other end of the develop- B B & L Bryan Building & Loan Association, Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. —Adv. 1 ★ ★ ★ 6 American Dream’ Casting To Begin Casting for an Aggie Players production of “The American Dream,” a comedy by Edward Albee, is set Monday and Tues day in the Guion Hall Fallout Theater. Director Robert H. Archer, instructor in English at A&M, said parts are open for two men and three women, with jobs available for persons in terested in working on the technical crew. Bryan-College Station residents and A&M stu dents are invited to audition. Archer added. The play will be produced Dec. 7-8-9 in the Fallout The ater. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M” —Adv. MIKE DOUGLAS GETS CERTIFIED Mrs. John Connally, Texas’ First Lady, presents TV host Mike Douglas with a certificate proclaiming him an Ambassador to next year’s Hemisfair in San Antonio. Singer Anita Bryant look on. Texas A&M’s Singing Cadets, behind director Robert Boone, stands at left before their appearance on the nationally-televised Mike Douglas Show. (See story, more pictures, Page 3)