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COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1963 Number 76
Weekend Slateforts by Ie 1 Glover, md behinil E. L. Eaer one-mile
Campbell ond in the Deaver tod: np. y copped: run; EarlBArmy cadets will invade Sbisa Hall Friday to change the 880; 1 jg decour to that of Viet Nam for the annual Combat Ball, to wo-mile nii;pieid in conjunction with the Spring Military Weekend md Gail viday and Saturday, i the polei|E|ents will be^in Friday at"^~
ihows Dances, ITS, Review
2!ar Centul ers for
10 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coli- with the MSC Talent Com-
iittoe’s Intercolle{?iate Talent The show will feature
i. m.
wen acts from Southern schools It-Peugeot )r the 12th annual ITS. Masters & Mremonies will be The Gaylords,
Motor Carrighj ciup, entertainers from Hous-irts—Servi-m.dl Foreipi Tickets for the show are $1 and e. TAi'l available at the Student Pro- .........mi pm Office. Student activity
ds will not be honored.
,()j Included in the show will be The Wayfarers, folksing'ers who won
KC steak,! Aggie Talent Show; The King's |e, a jazz trio from Baylor; Pat
s from Texas Tech who does slap-stick comedy routine; The fas, a banjo band from the
niversity of Texas; Judy Hardy nd The Nomads from Oklahoma Bi; University; two vocalists
military comedy routine j| Louisiana State University.
ALSO INCLUDED in the show ill be Carol Lea, a western vocal- |from Oklahoma University.
Sophie Newcomb will be Borochoff who does modern dancing. The Kilgore Col- Rangerettes will open and
ose this year’s show.The Combat Ball will begin im-■________ _____________
ikes
WireReview
By The Associated Press
WORLD NEWSONN, Germany — Ambassador ivingston T. Merchant arrived ) Bonn Tuesday night to discuss est Germany’s role in a seaborne uliination nuclear force Presi- ent Kennedy has proposed for the 'estern alliance.liThc Soviet Union again de- fijiced the plan as increasing he jtempo of the arms race and aid the Kremlin would have to ^shape its policies if the Kenedy proposals are adopted.The United States has pledged
; Bee Polaris submarines to a ililtination nuclear force under
I HNorth Atlantic Treaty Organ- nation. Sources here say it also muld include 25 surface ships, ach carrying 25 Polaris missiles nd manned by men of partici- 'ating nations.
U. S. NEWSWASHINGTON — The Internal levonue Service will streamline pelf starting late this year, hop- ■ to save the taxpayers $5 mil- ion a year, Secretary of the Trea- toy Douglas Dillon announced Tuesday.■ome district offices will be Bged or their work load cut and fTO regional offices will be elim- Mted. This is designed to redune le work force, reportedly by ■ut 200 jobs, and cut down on he overhead of office and equip- nent expenses.
TEXAS NEWS■AN ANTONIO — Texas celestes the 127th anniversary of one ■the most important events in ■erican history Wednesday —
ie fall of the Alamo.It was on March 6, 1836 that
■he superior forces of Mexican ®. Santa Anna finally swarmed
?9r the walls of a dilapidated Ij^nish mission in San Antonio iBexar and killed 187 members
■he Texas Army.
mediately after ITS for all Army cadets and senior Air Force cadets. Fatigues must be worn by both Air Force and Army cadets. No flight suits will be worn to the dance according to Trigon instructions. Dates are asked to wear oriental costumes.
During the intermission, the Army’s Combat Cutie will be selected from six finalists. Included are Sandra Powell of Huntsville, escorted by Rufus Lyne; Sandy Hughes of Houston, escorted by Benny Boyd; Merry Martin of Georgetown, escorted by Marvin Stapper, Suzanne Sorenson of Austin, escoi’ted by Warren Dillard, Linda Salm of Weimar, escorted by Herb Rabel, and Brenda Bertrand of San Marcos escorted by Charles Blaschke.
The MSC Dance Committee will also sponsor a dance Friday night in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. “Midnight in New Orleans” will feature an area band, and will begin after ITS. Tickets are $2 per couple and are available in the Student Program Office.
THE SPRING MILITARY review is planned for Saturday at 1:30 p.m. on the main drill field. Honored guests will include Congressman and Mrs. Olin E. Teague; Lt. Gen. W. H. S. Wright, who is chief of reserve components; Maj. Gen. and Mrs. W. J. Sutton; Brig. Gen. and Mrs. Robert Travis, and Col. and Mrs. William C. Lindley.
Saturday night the formal Military Ball will begin at 9, featuring Buddy Brock and his orchestra from Houston. Open to both Air Force and Army cadets, class “A” winter uniforms with white shirts and bow ties must be worn.
Local TalentThe Wayfarers, first place winners in this dents making up the group are Glyn Bar- year’s Aggie Talent Show, will play and rows, Bill Sturgeon, Mack Moore and Louis sing folksongs Friday night at ITS. - Stu- King. (Related picture on Page 3.)
WIFE MORE IMPORTANT THAN EVER
Marriage Forum Speaker Says No Love Without Sex
By CLOVIS McCALLISTER Battalion Staff Writer
Dr. Sidney Hamilton of North Texas State University told approximately 100 students that if they are wondering how to be sure of finding- the right person to marry, to forget it.
Hamilton, a psychology professor, was opening the four weekly sessions of the YMCA Marriage Forums.
Marriage is important to society and mans’ wife is more important than ever before. The family is the most stable institution today, Hamilton said.
History Scholar To Lecture Here
Dr. Perry Miller, scholar in the literature and history of the A- merican colonial period, will lecture on campus at 8 p.m. Thursday as a Graduate Lecture Series program speaker in the Biological Sciences Lecture Room.
Miller is the Powell M. Cabot professor of American Literature at Harvard University. This academic year he is a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, School of Historical Studies, Princeton, N. J. He joined the Harvard faculty in 1931 as an instructor.
THE SCHOLAR IS the author of six books and coauthor of a seventh. His most recent is “The New England Mind: From Colony to Province.”
Miller will discuss “Ideas and
DR. PERRY MILLER
Environment in American Literature: Puritanism, Romanticism,Realism” in his lecture.
A native of Chicago, he holds the Ph.B. (1928) and Ph.D. (1931) degrees from the University of Chicago. He was awarded honorary degrees from Gonzaga, Syracuse and Northeastern Universities and Grinnell College.
In 1952 he was a lecturer at the University of Tokyo, and in 1949- 50 was a guest professor at the University of Leyden. In 1953-54 he first went to the Institute for Advanced Study, School of Historical Studies.
MILLER SERVED AS a captain and major during Woi-ld War II.
He lists membership in the Massachusetts Historical Society, Colonial Society of Massachusetts, A- merican Antiquarian Society, Mo- ern Language Association and the American Philosophical Society.
He was advanced to associate professor at Harvard in 1939 and later became professor of Ameri-
fS can literature. In 1960 he was ; named Powell M. Cabot professor
of American literature. m Miller’s first book was “Ortho-
doxy in Massachusetts,” published in 1933. He and T. H. Johnson wrote “The Puritans,” published in 1938. Later works of Miller’s include “The New England Mind: The Seventeenth Century,” “Jonathan Edwards,” “Roger Williams.” “The Raven and the Whale” and “The New England Mind: FromColony to Province.”
YOU CAN’T HAVE love without sex and marriage is a sex outlet, he pointed out.
“Divorce can be the finest thing in the world, if need be. The necessity for divorce is the disaster, not the divorce itself,” Hamilton said.
Hamilton stated, “The basic reasons why people marry are securi-
Congressman’s Daughter Calls Income Useful
CHICAGO GT1) — The daughter of Rep. George Meader, R-Mich., di-aws $167.54 a month on her father’s congressional payroll while she attends college. The Chicago Daily News reported Tuesday.
In a story from Washington by William McGaffin, the Daily News said the information had been confirmed in a telephone interview with the daughter, Katherine, 22, a nursing student at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
She said her job is to “send out baby letters” for her father. The story said this involves addressing envelopes to new pai-ents in the congressman’s district and stuffing them with form letters.
THE PARENTS also received, from Washington, a government- financed booklet titled “Infant Care.”
“We get the names of the new parents out of the newspapers,” Miss Meader told the Daily News
“The money is a big help in getting through college,” she said. “It takes care of the rent for my apartment and my food.”
As a congressman, her father receives $22,500 a year. There is one other child in the family, a son.
MISS MEADER has been on her father’s payroll since she entered the University of Florida in September 1961, the Daily News said. She expects to receive her bachelor’s degree in December.
She said her father “seems to have quite a reproductive district. We send out between 2,000 and 3,000 baby letters a month.”
A spokesman for the U. S. Children’s Bureau, however, said Meader gets only 200 of the baby care books a month.
ty, companionship, pressure to do the usual and the desire for new experiences.” He added marriage is a way to achieve happiness for both mates.
“A couple begins a marriage with infatuation and love comes as a result of the marriage and sex. You are more in love after five years than you are the first and even more in love the tenth year than in the fifth,” Hamilton said.
THE REASON MARRIAGES are more successful today is because more people and the younger people are getting married. The most successful marriages of today are among college students, Hamilton argued.
The sometimes marriage counselor said the main problems in marriage today stem from a lack of comunication, sexual adjustment and finances. Finances aren’t as critical as they used to be because one-third of the wives are working.
If sex masters love it is evil but love must master sex, Hamilton said. “Sex is common to all animals but love is unique to man. Love isn’t blind or false, but infatuation is, he added.
Hamilton gave the key to a happy marriage as the ability to see the individuality of the mate and change to fit into the pattern.
First Vote Due In. 3-4 WeeksAUSTIN—Proposed legislation to change the College’s
name to Texas A&M University was introduced in the House this morning by Rep. David Haines of College Station.
Haines had anticipated introducing the bill Tuesday afternoon, but a question on the name-change necessitated additional technical corrections before it could be dropped in the House clerk’s hopper, Haines said.
The bill, if passed by the House and the Senate, changes A&M’s name to “Texas A&M University,” and the College System to the “Texas A&M University College System.”
Haines, a 1951 graduate of A&M, said the technical change was to remove references in the bill to the Board of Directors. He explained : 4-----------------------------------------
“A&M was created by the constitution, while the A&M System was created by statute.There has been some question on this, but we can get around any objections by deleting anything to do with the Board of Directors.
“The only parts that had to be I'evised were the title, section four and section five.”
Haines said the bill would probably be assigned a number Thursday and then go to the House state affairs committee.
“It may be three of four weeks before the bill comes to a vote in the House,” he said.
Before the bill is brought to the floor, a committee hearing will have to be scheduled. Haines said that the hearings will probably be short, lasting only 15 or 20 minutes.
Then after passing the House, the legislation must go to the Senate, where a similar procedure of committtee hearing and readings will be followed, he said.
Haines has predicted that the bill will have no trouble passing the House.
In the Senate, Bryan’s W. T.(Bill) Moore, ’40, said that “there had been too much talking on both sides. I haven’t given the bill much thought in the last few days.” he said.
Mooi'e has called the proposed name a mistake and is a backer of the name “Texas State University” for A&M.
Sen. A. R. Schwartz, another A&M graduate, said that he was willing to actively support the bill in the Senate. “I am satisfied with the name change as it has been requested. I want to do what A&M wants to do.
Schwartz, who has incurred the wrath of many senators for attacking closed sessions on confirming- appointments, said he thought that if A&M’s name was changed to Texas A&M University he believed Texas Tech would actively press for the name Texas State University.
House Hikes Auto Liability Insurance Rate
AUSTIN (A3) — House members approved Tuesday an estimated $1 million dollar increase in automobile liability insurance premiums for Texans.
The House approved 100-47 and sent to the Senate a bill raising requirements for financial responsibility in case of auto accidents to $10,000 for death or injury to one person, $20,000, $20,000 for two persons and $5,000 for property damage.
Present requirements are $5,000, $10,000 and $5,000. A person may fulfill the requmements by buying liability insurance, as 65 per cent of Texas drivers’ do, or guarantee payment of equal amounts by posting a personal bond.
“There would be an estimated $14 million increase to taxpayers in insui’ance premiums, said Rep. James Gotten, Weatherford, in protesting that the increased requirements would make the state insurance board hike rates about 25 per cent. “This is a special interest bill for the insurance companies.”
“This is not a special interest bill,” argued Rep. Bob Fairchild Center, sponsor of the measure.“I can go back home and tell my people that I voted to stiffen the motor vehicle safety responsibility act.”
The vote Tuesday ended two days of arguments over the measure. Fairchild and other supporters said the bill is needed to protect innocent drivers and help curb the huge economic loss from accidents. An amendment to the bill, not in the present law, would make uninsured drivers post a minimum $250 deposit if involved in an accident.
Rooms Requested For Career Day
Some 300 more rooms are needed to house visiting high school students for High School Career Day, March 15-16, Hugh Magers announced at Tuesday’s meeting of the Inter-Council.
Magers, chairman of the housing committee for High School Cai’eer Day, said “We have 102 rooms now and we need about 400 in all. There are about three rooms available per unit now, and we need 11 or 12 per outfit to
Texas Tech Editorial Urges Athletic Integration In SWC
Texas Tech’s student newspaper, The Daily Toreador, in a page-one editorial has called for athletic integration of the Southwest Conference’s newest member school.
The editorial, signed by Toreador editor Charles Richards, called athletic integration “something that will be of lasting benefit to the conference. The Negro has shown in other schools he is capable of being a leader in athletics as well as in the classroom. We like to think of the Southwest Conference as an athletic powerhouse—and it does pull away its share of wins — but a glance at the top ten of any sport shows the SWC behind the Big Ten and the Big Eight, among others.”
The Toreador called athletic integration of the conference “only two or three years away,” and
urged action by Tech before the University of Texas decides to make a similar move.
The editorial continued:“If Texas Tech does not make
the first move, it probably will be made by Texas, which ah'eady has the jump in the athletic recruiting race. Red Raider football is in one of its worst drouths. Even though the next few grid seasons are being billed as the best in a decade, can we afford to give Texas an advantage as far as Negro athletes are concerned ?
“We are tired of the cry that Texas Tech is the ‘baby’ of the conference and should not be the one to initiate action. We feel Tech is on a par with any school in the conference. If we are in a position to do something for the good of the conference, let’s not stay in the background.”
meet the demand. Companies 1-3 and B-l have been the most cooperative outfits so far.”
Students desiring to assist Magers and his committee should notify their first sergeants or sergeant majors .
THE INTER-COUNCIL, which consists of representatives from each school council, has arranged separate programs for junior college students and high school students.
The junior college conclave will be held the afternoon of March 15, while the high school students gather on March 16.
Tentatively, the junior college students will meet with a dean’s representative of their respective schools for tours and talks. A general assembly is planned for each school.
REGISTRATION FOR High School Career Day will begin at 1 p.m. March 15 in the MSC and will end at 9 a.m. the next day.
High School Day will begin with a review of the Corps of Cadets. The students will he welcomed by President Earl Rudder in a general assembly, after which they will move to their respective schools and departments for the rest of the morning’s activities.
The visitoi-s will eat lunch in Duncan Hall and will have the afternoon free for tours.
High School Career Day is held each year to acquaint college prospects with the campus and facilities, and to promote a general interest in higher education among high school seniors.
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