Cbe Battalion -...

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Cbe Battalion Vol. 65 No. 32 College Station, Texas Thursday, November 6, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 Eventually9 GOP to Texas Senator Says Lead State MANTOVANI MAGICIN ACTION 1i§antovani and his orchestra perfom before a Town Hall audience numbering in the pousands Wednesday night in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Through the varied types of Jusic and exciting style, he showed all present why he has come to be known as the incomparable Mantovani.The maestro and his musicians received no less than three -Jpnding ovations from the audience. (Photo by Mike Wright) 4i §j Three - Year Sch olarships Offered by Army ROTC Army ROTC scholarship pro- kms at Texas A&M have been Ularged this year to include ree-year scholarships, Col. Jim |jyi H McCoy announced. IIHjThe professor of military sci- noted that awards of two- three-year scholarships are JSJjSBade at A&M on a competitive ,v»sis. Applications of qualified * ™Bdets in the four-year ROTC ■ogram will be accepted until 'Ijln. 15. ®^Colonel McCoy indicated A&M Is the highest quota of two-year wards in the nation, along with yio State. The Fourth Army ^allocation of three-year scholar- iiips is 70. All applicants must be enrolled in the four-year senior ROTC program and qualify for entrance into the advanced course. A cadet nominated and selected for an Army ROTC scholarship must possess the same qualifications for Distinguished Military Stu- dents, including standing in the upper third of his military class and upper half of his academic class. Selection and approval of nominees is based primarily on academic achievement, leadership potential and demonstrated mo- tivation toward an Army career, McCoy said. He added that interested cadets should report to the Basic Sec- tion, Room 304-A, Military Sci- ence Building. Cadets will be informed of the Arniy scholarship programs in military science classes and better students will be interviewed about making application. In time, the dominant political party in Texas will be the Re- publican Party. The trend is that way, asserts Texas Senator Henry C. (Hank) Grover of Houston, and can be considerably enhanced by a Re- publican unseating Senator Ralph Yarborough. Increasing the rate of change in the trend depends on whether key Republicans in Texas are Willing to start in the right place, the former Democrat who turned Republican in 1966 told a capacity Political Forum audi- ence at A&M Wednesday. Very few of them want to start at the level of the state Legislature, where they could cut their political teeth and learn the ropes,Grover said. Emphasis is on the top state and national offices.The problem with this empha- sis is that the Democrat-con- trolled Texas Legislature draws the districts for Democratic wins,the Houston legislator continued. What we need to do is work at the legislature and do it to them for awhile.Gerrymandering, he reminded. Two-Tour Vietnam Veteran Will Talk to Corps Nov. 12 S United Chest its, Exceeds Goal College Station United jE5||hest fund-raising drive Wednes- ;~Jmy exceeded its $28,050 goal, WBinounced Campaign Chairman 2Bob Evans. Evans said contributions tabu- \ywBited Wednesday morning pushed total to $28,121.52. We appreciate the support we ceived from the citizens of Col- feg-e Station, and especially from Jib persons who volunteered to WSBelp in this years record drive,Ivans noted. “I never doubted that the community would provide the necessary funds.United Chest President Wesley Donaldson also expresses his gratitude for the excellent re- sponse to this years campaign. Our community has again demonstrated that it will meet its responsibilities,Donaldson remarked. The United Chests 1969 budget will provide support for 16 char- itable and civic organizations. An Army officer wounded four times in two Vietnam tours will speak to A&M cadets Wednesday through the Army Speakers Pro- gram. Maj. Dalals L. Cox will appear before cadet corps members in Room 321 of the Physics Build- ing, announced Col. Jim H. Mc- Coy, commandant. The two-time recipient of the Silver Star, the nations third highest award for valor, will be sponsored by Wings and Sabers, organization of A&M cadets on Army and Air Force ROTC schol- arship. Participation is limited to members of the Corps of Cadets. A native of Hiwassee, Va., Major Cox, 33, joined the Air Force in 1954, transferred to the Army as a staff sergeant in 1960 and was commissioned through Infantry Officers Candidate School in 1962. He became fluent in the Serbo- Croatian language during a year study at the Defense Language Institute in California, completed special warfare school and went to Europe with the 10th Special Forces. His first assignment in Viet- nam in 1966-67 as Special Forces team commander led to construc- tion of a special forces camp at Lang Vei. He returned to South- east Asia in 1968 as an infantry company commander and later became battalion executive of- ficer. Twice he assumed battalion command when the battalion commanders were medically evac- uated. During the second Viet- nam tour, Major Cox was located in the Michelin Rubber Planta- tion, familiar with such names as the Iron Triangle, Trapezoid, Onion and Razor Back. The William and Mary College graduate wears the Bronze Star with Vdevice for valor. is as old as the U. S. political system. Grover pointed to several in- dications of the Republican trend, underlining that three of Texasfour neighboring states have Republican governors. The trend has been going on over 100 years, maybe since pio- neers started westward,he said. The shift of American popula- tion has been to the Western U. S., taking with it a shift in political power.Alliances of the conservative South and West are more favor- able to the Republicans, Grover believes, because the Texas Dem- ocrats are shifting more toward the Northern liberals, alienating DPS Requests Assistance of Local Drivers The Texas Department of Pub- lic Safety (DPS) is asking drivers to use a route other than State Highway 6 between Navasota and Bryan-College Station Sunday. Sgt. Paul L. Allen, area super- visor for the highway patrol, made the request because of an- ticipated heavy traffic in connec- tion with the Canadian-American (Can-Am) race scheduled Sunday at the new Texas International Speedway (TIS). Allen said the highway nor- mally operates at near-capacity during weekends anyway, and the traffic from the raceway will probably overload the highway. People returning home Sunday from the A&M-Southern Method- ist University football game Sat- urday will add to the probelm, Allen said. He suggested that drivers com- ing back via Navasota use FM 2154 to make the journey from Navasota to the B-CS area. The farm road runs into highway 6 on the north side of Navasota, Allen explained. It passes through Millican and Wellborn, he added, and goes through College Station on the west side of the A&M campus passing by Kyle Field. the states conservative Demo- crats. The two-term Republican sen- ator who served from 1960-66 as a conservative Democratic repre- sentative indicated this was his case. Im a fourth-generation Tex- an,Grover said, and the first member of my family to for- mally become Republican. With the direction the Democratic party is taking, Texas Demo- crats have to move more and more towards the liberals or get out of the party. Connally and Smith are mak- ing more and more concessions to the liberals,he emphasized. Grover pointed out that the 1960 and 1968 presidential elec- tions support crystallization of the trend. Southern and West- ern wings of the Democratic party are diametrically opposed to the Northeast wing. John F. Kennedy won in spite of the rift in 1960 by taking on LBJ, a move that held the two Democratic factions together in baling wire and chewing gum fashion,as Grover views it. H u m p h r e y tried again in 1968, but couldnt swing it,he noted. With the Kennedys defused ... at least for 1972 and maybe forever . . . its up for grabs,believes the Houston senator who won his second Senate term by 73 per cent of the vote last year. The U. S. Senate race in Texas is vitally important for both the Republicans and Dem- ocrats. Texas is the weak link in the growing Republican strength.U. S. Rep. George Bush has been observed as Yarboroughs opposition but such a decision by Bush is yet to be made. He has seniority on the House Ways and Means Commit- tee,Grover noted. The ques- tion is whether he should put it all on one roll of the dice. Bush cant say it, but he may feel that Nixon might take him as a run- ning mate in the next presiden- tial election. But Nixon cant do that if Bush runs against Yar- borough and loses.Bushs decision could have a major effect on Grovers politi- cal future, the Texas senator ad- mitted. Ags To Be Pals To 36 Orphans Youngsters from the Depelchin Faith Home in Houston will be guests of A&M students Saturday for the A&M-SMU football game. The 36 orphans will be met at the Memorial Student Center by students and their dates, taken out for lunch and sit with the Aggie escorts at the 1:30 p.m. game. Arranged by the Student Senate Welfare and Life Committees, the program is well received by A&M students, according to Gerald A. Bramlett, committee chairman, of Shreveport. We did it last year and it was a lot of fun for the kids and for us too,commented senior Ron- nie Adams of Tyler. The Houston home will bus the 36 youths, ages 7 to 19, to College Station Saturday morning. The youngsters, most of age 14 or 15, are chaperoned by four adults. Usually, the student meets his pal at the Cabout 11 a.m., goes for lunch and buys him a souvenir or gift before going to the game,Adams added. They all sit to- gether behind the Aggie Band. Bramlett noted that both Corps and civilian students host the visitors and are glad to be a big brother for a day.WEATHER Friday Partly cloudy, after- noon rainshowers. Wind North- erly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 74, low 52. Kyle Field Clear to partly cloudy, wind Westerly 10 to 15 m.p.h. 74°. No rain. en. Schriever Speaks Tonight n National Defense Policies Retired Air Force Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, whose 33 years mili- lary experience ranged from pi- loting bombers to heading the jtomplex Air Force Systems Com- mand, will be presented tonight >y Great Issues on National De- fense Policies and Priorities.General Schriever, 59, directed the nations highest priority proj- ect, development of the Air Force ballistic missile program and ini- tial space programs, as AFSC commander. Great Issues chairman Tom Fitzhugh of Waco said the 8 p.m. presentation will be in the Ar- chitecture auditorium. Fitzhugh noted that admission will not be charged to General Schrievers talk but that financial Patronage contributions by par- ticipating faculty-staff members and townspeople are solicited. Great Issues, Political Forum and Contemporary Arts Commit- tees of the Memorial Student Center provide A&M students and interested local patrons insight into current political and social issues and contemporary art forms at no charge, depending upon subscriptions to finance the respective programs. A 1931 A&M graduate in archi- tecture, General Schriever was one of the first Distinguished Alumni designated by the univer- sity and has appeared frequently at campus events. The Washing- ton, D. C., consultant firm owner was speaker at the 1958 Mtister and will make the principal ad- dress Saturday morning at the post-World War II memorial ded- ication in the Cadet Corps dor- mitory area. The San Antonio son who was Invitation The Corps of Cadets wishes to invite all civilian stu- dents, staff, and faculty of Texas A&M University to the dedication of the Memorial Meditation Garden at 9:30 a. m. on November 8 1969. This memorial honors the more than three-hundred Aggies who have given their lives in the service of their country since World War II. We would like all students to join with us in paying this tribute to those Aggies who have made the supreme sacrifice for our country. Your attendance will be greatly appreciated and will help to make this a fitting tribute to these fallen Aggies. Mathew R. Carroll Cadet Colonel of the Corps Commanding born in Bi'emen, Germany, began his military career the year he graduated from A&M, accepting a reserve appointment in the field artillery. He entered flight train- ing at Randolph Field in 1932 and received his wings and commis- sion in June, 1933, at Kelly Field. While inactive during 1937, Schriever was a commercial air- line pilot. Reactivated in 1938, he attend- ed the Air Corps Engineer School and later studied at Stanford for a masters degree in aeronautical engineering and the National War College. Assigned with the 19th Bomb Group in the Southwest Pacific in 1942, the officers who holds the Distinguished Service Medal Ivith Oak Leaf Cluster, Legion of Merit, Air Medal and Purple Heart participated in Bismarck Archipelago, Leyte, Luzon, Pa- pua, North Solomon, South Phil- ippine and Ryukyu campaigns. His later assignments included chief of staff, 5th Air Force Service Command, and the Far East Air Service Command. General Schriever was assign- ed command of the Air Research and Development Center, later to become the AFSC, in 1959 and al- so directed the Manned Orbiting University National Bank On the side of Texas A&M.Adv. Laboratory program in addition to other duties. Under his leadership, the Atlas, Titan, Thor and Minuteman bal- listic missiles were developed along with complex systems for their launching, tracking and ground support. The propulsion, guidance and management tech- niques developed for the Air Force ballistic missile program served at the base of the U. S. space program. General Schriever retired in August, 1966. He was appointed last year as a special consultant for business participation in Housing and Urban Development. Bonfire Meetings Planned Tonight Two Bonfire safety meetings will be held tonight, Head Yell Leader Sam Tom has announced. One, for all people who plan to be wielding an ax, will be at 7:30 in the Grove, he said. The other, also at 7:30, will be for freshmen in particular, he said, as well as for all students who have not worked on Bonfire before. It will be held in the Ballroom of the Memorial Stu- dent Center, he noted. Bryan Building & L*>an BYE-BYE BIRDIE ssocia ion. our av- ^ peacock at the Aububon Park Zoo in New Orleans takes to a tree to give chase to a mg ,en er, since . ca^ jnyadjng the compond. The kitten decided to go out on a limb rather than meet up BB&Li Adv. with the brave (and presumably angry) bird. (AP Wirephoto)

Transcript of Cbe Battalion -...

Cbe BattalionVol. 65 No. 32 College Station, Texas Thursday, November 6, 1969 Telephone 845-2226

Eventually9

GOP toTexas Senator Says

Lead State

MANTOVANI MAGIC” IN ACTION1i§antovani and his orchestra perfom before a Town Hall audience numbering in the

pousands Wednesday night in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Through the varied types of Jusic and exciting style, he showed all present why he has come to be known as the incomparable Mantovani.” The maestro and his musicians received no less than three

-Jpnding ovations from the audience. (Photo by Mike Wright)4i§j Three - Year Sch olarships

Offered by Army ROTCArmy ROTC scholarship pro- kms at Texas A&M have been

Ularged this year to include ree-year scholarships, Col. Jim

|jyi H McCoy announced.IIHjThe professor of military sci-

noted that awards of two- three-year scholarships are

JSJjSBade at A&M on a competitive ,v»sis. Applications of qualified

* ™Bdets in the four-year ROTC ■ogram will be accepted until 'Ijln. 15.

®^Colonel McCoy indicated A&M Is the highest quota of two-year wards in the nation, along with yio State. The Fourth Army

^allocation of three-year scholar- iiips is 70.

All applicants must be enrolled in the four-year senior ROTC program and qualify for entrance into the advanced course. A cadet nominated and selected for an Army ROTC scholarship must possess the same qualifications for Distinguished Military Stu­dents, including standing in the upper third of his military class and upper half of his academic class.

Selection and approval of nominees is based primarily on academic achievement, leadership potential and demonstrated mo­tivation toward an Army career, McCoy said.

He added that interested cadets

should report to the Basic Sec­tion, Room 304-A, Military Sci­ence Building. Cadets will be informed of the Arniy scholarship programs in military science classes and better students will be interviewed about making application.

In time, the dominant political party in Texas will be the Re­publican Party.

The trend is that way, asserts Texas Senator Henry C. (Hank) Grover of Houston, and can be considerably enhanced by a Re­publican unseating Senator Ralph Y arbo rough.

Increasing the rate of change in the trend depends on whether key Republicans in Texas are Willing to start in the right place, the former Democrat who turned Republican in 1966 told a capacity Political Forum audi­ence at A&M Wednesday.

“Very few of them want to start at the level of the state Legislature, where they could cut their political teeth and learn the ropes,” Grover said. “Emphasis is on the top state and national offices.”

“The problem with this empha­sis is that the Democrat-con­trolled Texas Legislature draws the districts for Democratic wins,” the Houston legislator continued. “What we need to do is work at the legislature and do it to them for awhile.”

Gerrymandering, he reminded.

Two-Tour Vietnam Veteran Will Talk to Corps Nov. 12

S United Chest its, Exceeds Goal

College Station United jE5||hest fund-raising drive Wednes- ;~Jmy exceeded its $28,050 goal, WBinounced Campaign Chairman 2Bob Evans.

Evans said contributions tabu- \ywBited Wednesday morning pushed

total to $28,121.52.“We appreciate the support we ceived from the citizens of Col-

feg-e Station, and especially from Jib persons who volunteered to

WSBelp in this year’s record drive,” Ivans noted. “I never doubted

that the community would provide the necessary funds.”

United Chest President Wesley Donaldson also expresses his gratitude for the excellent re­sponse to this year’s campaign.

“Our community has again demonstrated that it will meet its responsibilities,” Donaldson remarked.

The United Chest’s 1969 budget will provide support for 16 char­itable and civic organizations.

An Army officer wounded four times in two Vietnam tours will speak to A&M cadets Wednesday through the Army Speakers Pro­gram.

Maj. Dalals L. Cox will appear before cadet corps members in Room 321 of the Physics Build­ing, announced Col. Jim H. Mc­Coy, commandant.

The two-time recipient of the Silver Star, the nation’s third highest award for valor, will be sponsored by Wings and Sabers, organization of A&M cadets on Army and Air Force ROTC schol­arship. Participation is limited to members of the Corps of Cadets.

A native of Hiwassee, Va., Major Cox, 33, joined the Air Force in 1954, transferred to the Army as a staff sergeant in 1960 and was commissioned through Infantry Officers Candidate School in 1962.

He became fluent in the Serbo-

Croatian language during a year study at the Defense Language Institute in California, completed special warfare school and went to Europe with the 10th Special Forces.

His first assignment in Viet­nam in 1966-67 as Special Forces team commander led to construc­tion of a special forces camp at Lang Vei. He returned to South­east Asia in 1968 as an infantry company commander and later became battalion executive of­ficer.

Twice he assumed battalion command when the battalion commanders were medically evac­uated. During the second Viet­nam tour, Major Cox was located in the Michelin Rubber Planta­tion, familiar with such names as the Iron Triangle, Trapezoid, Onion and Razor Back.

The William and Mary College graduate wears the Bronze Star with “V” device for valor.

is as old as the U. S. political system.

Grover pointed to several in­dications of the Republican trend, underlining that three of Texas’ four neighboring states have Republican governors.

“The trend has been going on over 100 years, maybe since pio­neers started westward,” he said. “The shift of American popula­tion has been to the Western U. S., taking with it a shift in political power.”

Alliances of the conservative South and West are more favor­able to the Republicans, Grover believes, because the Texas Dem­ocrats are shifting more toward the Northern liberals, alienating

DPS Requests Assistance of Local DriversThe Texas Department of Pub­

lic Safety (DPS) is asking drivers to use a route other than State Highway 6 between Navasota and Bryan-College Station Sunday.

Sgt. Paul L. Allen, area super­visor for the highway patrol, made the request because of an­ticipated heavy traffic in connec­tion with the Canadian-American (Can-Am) race scheduled Sunday at the new Texas International Speedway (TIS).

Allen said the highway nor­mally operates at near-capacity during weekends anyway, and the traffic from the raceway will probably overload the highway.

People returning home Sunday from the A&M-Southern Method­ist University football game Sat­urday will add to the probelm, Allen said.

He suggested that drivers com­ing back via Navasota use FM 2154 to make the journey from Navasota to the B-CS area. The farm road runs into highway 6 on the north side of Navasota, Allen explained.

It passes through Millican and Wellborn, he added, and goes through College Station on the west side of the A&M campus passing by Kyle Field.

the state’s conservative Demo­crats.

The two-term Republican sen­ator who served from 1960-66 as a conservative Democratic repre­sentative indicated this was his case.

“I’m a fourth-generation Tex­an,” Grover said, “and the first member of my family to for­mally become Republican. With the direction the Democratic party is taking, Texas Demo­crats have to move more and more towards the liberals or get out of the party.

“Connally and Smith are mak­ing more and more concessions to the liberals,” he emphasized.

Grover pointed out that the 1960 and 1968 presidential elec­tions support crystallization of the trend. Southern and West­ern wings of the Democratic party are diametrically opposed to the Northeast wing.

John F. Kennedy won in spite of the rift in 1960 by taking on LBJ, a move that held the two Democratic factions together in “baling wire and chewing gum fashion,” as Grover views it.

“H u m p h r e y tried again in

1968, but couldn’t swing it,” he noted.

“With the Kennedy’s defused ... at least for 1972 and maybe forever . . . it’s up for grabs,” believes the Houston senator who won his second Senate term by 73 per cent of the vote last year. “The U. S. Senate race in Texas is vitally important for both the Republicans and Dem­ocrats. Texas is the weak link in the growing Republican strength.”

U. S. Rep. George Bush has been observed as Yarborough’s opposition but such a decision by Bush is yet to be made.

“He has seniority on the House Ways and Means Commit­tee,” Grover noted. “The ques­tion is whether he should put it all on one roll of the dice. Bush can’t say it, but he may feel that Nixon might take him as a run­ning mate in the next presiden­tial election. But Nixon can’t do that if Bush runs against Yar­borough and loses.”

Bush’s decision could have a major effect on Grover’s politi­cal future, the Texas senator ad­mitted.

Ags To Be Pals To 36 Orphans

Youngsters from the Depelchin Faith Home in Houston will be guests of A&M students Saturday for the A&M-SMU football game.

The 36 orphans will be met at the Memorial Student Center by students and their dates, taken out for lunch and sit with the Aggie escorts at the 1:30 p.m. game.

Arranged by the Student Senate Welfare and Life Committees, the program is well received by A&M students, according to Gerald A. Bramlett, committee chairman, of Shreveport.

“We did it last year and it was a lot of fun for the kids and for us too,” commented senior Ron­nie Adams of Tyler.

The Houston home will bus the 36 youths, ages 7 to 19, to College Station Saturday morning. The

youngsters, most of age 14 or 15, are chaperoned by four adults.

“Usually, the student meets his pal at the ‘C’ about 11 a.m., goes for lunch and buys him a souvenir or gift before going to the game,” Adams added. They all sit to­gether behind the Aggie Band.

Bramlett noted that both Corps and civilian students host the visitors and are glad to be a “big brother for a day.”

WEATHERFriday — Partly cloudy, after­noon rainshowers. Wind North­erly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 74, low 52.Kyle Field — Clear to partly cloudy, wind Westerly 10 to 15 m.p.h. 74°. No rain.

en. Schriever Speaks Tonight n National Defense Policies

Retired Air Force Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, whose 33 years mili- lary experience ranged from pi­loting bombers to heading the jtomplex Air Force Systems Com­mand, will be presented tonight >y Great Issues on “National De­fense Policies and Priorities.”

General Schriever, 59, directed the nation’s highest priority proj­ect, development of the Air Force ballistic missile program and ini­tial space programs, as AFSC commander.

Great Issues chairman Tom Fitzhugh of Waco said the 8 p.m. presentation will be in the Ar­chitecture auditorium.

Fitzhugh noted that admission will not be charged to General Schriever’s talk but that financial Patronage contributions by par­ticipating faculty-staff members and townspeople are solicited.

Great Issues, Political Forum and Contemporary Arts Commit­tees of the Memorial Student Center provide A&M students and interested local patrons insight into current political and social issues and contemporary art forms at no charge, depending upon subscriptions to finance the respective programs.

A 1931 A&M graduate in archi­tecture, General Schriever was one of the first Distinguished Alumni designated by the univer­sity and has appeared frequently at campus events. The Washing­ton, D. C., consultant firm owner was speaker at the 1958 Mtister and will make the principal ad­dress Saturday morning at the post-World War II memorial ded­ication in the Cadet Corps dor­mitory area.

The San Antonio son who was

InvitationThe Corps of Cadets wishes to invite all civilian stu­

dents, staff, and faculty of Texas A&M University to the dedication of the Memorial Meditation Garden at 9:30 a. m. on November 8 1969.

This memorial honors the more than three-hundred Aggies who have given their lives in the service of their country since World War II.

We would like all students to join with us in paying this tribute to those Aggies who have made the supreme sacrifice for our country.

Your attendance will be greatly appreciated and will help to make this a fitting tribute to these fallen Aggies.

Mathew R. Carroll Cadet Colonel of the Corps Commanding

born in Bi'emen, Germany, began his military career the year he graduated from A&M, accepting a reserve appointment in the field artillery. He entered flight train­ing at Randolph Field in 1932 and received his wings and commis­sion in June, 1933, at Kelly Field.

While inactive during 1937, Schriever was a commercial air­line pilot.

Reactivated in 1938, he attend­ed the Air Corps Engineer School and later studied at Stanford for a master’s degree in aeronautical engineering and the National War College.

Assigned with the 19th Bomb Group in the Southwest Pacific in 1942, the officers who holds the Distinguished Service Medal Ivith Oak Leaf Cluster, Legion of Merit, Air Medal and Purple Heart participated in Bismarck Archipelago, Leyte, Luzon, Pa­pua, North Solomon, South Phil­ippine and Ryukyu campaigns.

His later assignments included chief of staff, 5th Air Force Service Command, and the Far East Air Service Command.

General Schriever was assign­ed command of the Air Research and Development Center, later to become the AFSC, in 1959 and al­so directed the Manned Orbiting

University National Bank“On the side of Texas A&M.”

—Adv.

Laboratory program in addition to other duties.

Under his leadership, the Atlas,Titan, Thor and Minuteman bal­listic missiles were developed along with complex systems for their launching, tracking and ground support. The propulsion, guidance and management tech­niques developed for the Air Force ballistic missile program served at the base of the U. S. space program.

General Schriever retired in August, 1966. He was appointed last year as a special consultant for business participation in Housing and Urban Development.

Bonfire Meetings Planned Tonight

Two Bonfire safety meetings will be held tonight, Head Yell Leader Sam Tom has announced.

One, for all people who plan to be wielding an ax, will be at 7:30 in the Grove, he said.

The other, also at 7:30, will be for freshmen in particular, he said, as well as for all students who have not worked on Bonfire before. It will be held in the Ballroom of the Memorial Stu­dent Center, he noted.

Bryan Building & L*>an BYE-BYE BIRDIEssocia ion. our av- ^ peacock at the Aububon Park Zoo in New Orleans takes to a tree to give chase to a

mg ,en er, since . ca^ jnyadjng the compond. The kitten decided to go out on a limb rather than meet upBB&Li —Adv. with the brave (and presumably angry) bird. (AP Wirephoto)