The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texat PAGE 2 Thursday, Apriil 2, 1959 BATTALION EDITORIALS . . . Our Liberty Depends on the Freedom of the Press, And It Cannot Be Limited Without Being Lost . . . Thomas Jefferson Laugh Until You Cry “Poor boy” school may be a most fitting- title for Texas A&M if the Legislature passes HB 216 calling for a million dollar cut in requested appropriations for each of the two years in the next fiscal period. In two years this college will be “poor boy” all right. It’ll be ragged at the sleeves financially. The cutback in requested monies for teachers’ salaries amounting to $278,307 won’t help pay the bills next year, much less attract the caliber of instructors needed desperate ly. The million dollar cut didn’t come as a result of an evil plot to set the college back another 10 years. It was a simple problem of numbers, or rather the lack of them. Both teacher salaries and general appropriations are directly tied to enrollment. Very simply stated, we get so much money per student, based on the number that can be expected to enroll during the next biennium. The college’s requests were based on projected enrollment of 7,700 stu dents expected next year. It is easy to see why the House Appropriations Com mittee laughed out the side of its mouth and slashed the figpre by one-eighth. A&M’s enrollment dropped by four hundred students this year. Anticipation of a big, fat in crease next year does appear a little ludicrous, doesn’t it? It’s funnier yet when we realize that each of us here has contributed in some way to stagnation of progress at Texas A&M. There is not a man on the campus, professor, student or staff member who has not undersold this school a little. Each is a little guilty of not making an all-out effort to work out minor internal problems in the school. Each is also guilty of not pushing Texas A&M to the state in general and to prospective students in particular. Some are guilty of embittering students already here and making it so dis tasteful they have no desire to remain. Every man on this campus can share the blame for the cut in A&M’s budget for next year. Each can share in the million dollar laugh—until they cry . . . Talk on Indonesia Planned Monday “Agriculture in Indonesia” will has been with the International Co- be discussed Monday at 4 p.m., in Room 105 of the Agronomy Build ing. Particular emphasis on corn and rice production will be stressed. The speaker will be Dx 1 . Robert I. Jackson, agronomy adviser (seed improvement) United States Ovex-- seas Mission, Indonesia. Jackson opex*ation Administration Mission in Indonesia since 1951. In the position of agronomy ad viser, Jackson guides and works, with Indonesian cereal bx-eeders to increase their skill and efficiency in producing varieties of rice and corn that will bring an increased yield and be better adapted to lo cal Indonesian conditions. ABOUT THOSE BOOTS HOW CAN YOU BE YOU’LL GET WHAT YOU SURE WANT IT’S EASY IF YOU DON’T ALREADY KNOW ABOUT JMcL’d THEN JUST ASK AROUND ORDER NOW! For delivery before final review Serving A&M Since 1891 .North Gate College Station, Texas THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported, non profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op erated by students as a community newspaper and is under the supervision of the director of Student Publications at Texas A&M College. Members of the Student Publications Board are L. A. Duewall, director of Student Pub’ications, chairman ; J. W. Amyx, School of Engineering; Harry Lee Kidd, School of Arts and Sciences; Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M., is published in College Sta tion, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem ber through May, and once a week during summer school. Entered as second - class matter at the Post Office in College Station, Texas, under the Act of Con gress of March 8, 1870. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Ass’n. Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los An geles, and San Francisco' Mail subscriptions are 53.50 per semester, 56 per school year, 56.50 per full year. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA, Col lege Station, Texas. ' The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Bights of republication of all other matter here in are also reserved. News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the tutorial office. Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. JOE BUSER EDITOR Fred Meurer Managing Editor Gayle McNutt Executive News Editor Bob Weekley Sports Editor Bill Reed, Johnny Johnson, David Stoker, Lewis Reddell—.News Editors Bill Hicklin Assistant Sports. Editor Robbie Godwin, Ken Coppage, Bob Edge, Jack Harts- field, Joe Callicoatte, Bob Saile, Jim Odom, Sam Spence, Leo Rigsby, Bob Roberts Staff Writers Ray Hudson Circulation Manager ’58 Good Year for Common Man — Social Whirl — According to Report from UN By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst The United Nations reported Tuesday, on the basis of infor mation furnished by member gov ernments, that the period 1957- 58 was a fairly good one for the material well-being of the world’s common man. On Wednesday it was disclosed that the commanding general of United States forces in Japan called back an American-bound plane carrying a vacationing col onel and his family, bumped them off and reinstated five emergen cy-leave GIs who had been bump ed in favor of the colonel. Observers, even those who could recall the taste of Army brass, found no direct connection. On the serious side, one of the statistics in the United Nations report on the improved lot of the world’s common man is that the world population in 1957 was 2,- 759,000,000 and growing at the rate of 1.6 per year. Many stu dents of the subject will question the propriety of such a statistic in such a report. They contend the increase is actually threaten ing the common man’s entire fu ture. The common man is supposed to be better off because of im proved diet, more doctors, more money—espepially in the form of foreign aid for underdeveloped peoples—^and more housing. There are always exceptions. Wednesday’s papers carried word that common men were dy ing of thirst in Tibet and Nyasa- land. Their thirst was for liber ty- Common men were being de ported from Tibet. Their hous ing problem had become acute. Common men and women in Red China have been removed by the million from their homes in to segregated barracks, and their children taken away to nurseries. The U.N. report did not con tain figures from the Soviet Un ion and China. The "South African government reported that it was really work ing for the independence of the common man there, who is large ly black. It planned to relocate him in strictly segregated com munities and make him free of the white man’s economy and give him his own—though some what limited—political institu tions. Minority groups in the United States—particularly Negroes and Indians at this moment—contin ued to fight for the right merely to be common men. There were no indications that the United Nations planned to follow its economic report with a formal report on the spiritual standing of the common man. The United States Coast Guard was founded in 1790. It was pro posed by Alexander Hamilton, then George Washington’s Secretary of the Treasury. Saturday Industrial Engineering Wives Club will have a bake sale at Orr’s Minimax in the Ridgecrest Shop ping Center starting at 9 a.m. Monday The B. A. Wives Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the home of Mrs. T. W. Leland, 1307 Walton Dr. Electrical Engineering Wives Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the YMCA Brooks Room for a pro gram in eating habits. Mechanical Engineering Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the YMCA South Solarium. Freshman Veterinary Medicine Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Kraft Homestead House in the Miller’s Shopping Center for a tour and refreshments. The Chemistry Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Lo June Vigneault, 1609 South Col lege, Bryan. Members are remind ed to bring articles for the rum mage sale April 10-11. Ag Education Wives Club will meet in the Agricultural Extension Building at 7:30 p.m. for a talk by Dr. Nena Harris. Ag Eco and Rural Sociology Wives Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Social Room of the MSC. Guest speaker will be Mrs. Fred Hale Agricultural Engineering Wives’ Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Dan Scoates, 401 Dexter. Tuesday Handicraft and Rug Group of the A&M Social Club will meet at 9:30 a.m. in the home of Mrs. George Summey, 408 Brookside. The Alaska town and island of Wrangel was named for Swedish Admiral Ferdinand Wrangel. His grandnephew, Baron Claus Von Wrangel, recently became a United States citizen in Seattle. Dine in style at... HOTARD’S Cafeteria 11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.—5 p. m. - 8:30 p.m. Architecture Gets Two $500 Awards The Division of Architecture has received two memorial awards to taling $1,000 for awarding to win ners of competition for fifth year architectural design students. T. R. Holleman, head of the Di vision of Architecture, has an nounced that th6 “Otis A. Felger Memorial Award” of $500 is from the Life Slab Management Corp. of San Antonio, and the “Lynn Al lison Porter Memorial Award” of $500 is from Mr. and Mrs. John B. Porter of San Antonio. Porter is president of the Lift Slab Manage ment Corp. The first award is in memory of Otis A. Felger, ’46, who was as sociated with the Lift Slab Man agement Corp. at the time of his death in June, 1958. The second award is in memory of the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Porter. Award winners will be an nounced at the annual banquet of the Division of Architecture in May. /hail,hail^ f , ^ The gauges all-theie!/ on American Express SfudentTouis of Europe Wherever, whenever, however you travel, your best assurance of the finest service is American Express! On American Express Student Tours of Europe you’ll be escorted on exciting itineraries covering such fascin ating countries as England . . . Belgium . . . Germany ... Austria . .. Switzerland . . . Italy . .. The Rivieras ... and France. And you’ll have ample free time and lots of individual leisure to really live life abroad! 7 Student Tours of Europe . . . featuring distinguished leaders from prominent colleges as tour conductors . . . 40 to 62 days ... by sea and by air ... $1,397 and up. 4 Educational Student Tours of Europe . . . with experienced escorts . . . by sea . .. 44 to 57 days .. . $872 and up. Other European Tours Available . . . from 14 days . . . $672 and up. 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SPACE TECHNOLOGY Offers work of the future ...today! - Computer programmers di applied mathematicians High speed digital computers and expanding computing systems require individuals with more than the usual amount of interest and ability in the fields of Applied Mathematics and related computer programming. Our Computation and Data Reduction Center in Southern California is one of the largest and most advanced facilities in the nation. Three of the largest and most modern high-speed digital computers (IBM 709, 704, and UNIVAC 1103A) are utilized in the support of Systems Engineering for the Air Force Ballistic Missile Program and space flight studies. Contact your placement office for an application, or send any inquiries to Space Technology Laboratories, Inc. to the attention of Mr. Gerald Backer. Space Technology Laboratories, inc. P.O. Box 95004, Los Angeles 45, California Do You Think for Yourself Pi ' THIS SHORT QUIZ WILL TIP YOU OFF! *, 1. When your friends impart confidences, do you feel (A) uncomfortable, or (B) complimented? □ *□ 2. Do you prefer a task which demands I 1 I ] (A) the organization of complex details, A | | B | | or (B) a constant flow of ideas? 3. Would your first reaction to a difficult committee appointment be that you had been (A) “stuck,” or (B) honored? □ 5. Do you find that you work or study ' A more effectively (A) under supervision, or (B) on your own schedule? 6. Is it your feeling that close friendships with superiors would be (A) a great help, or (B) actually a hindrance to your career with a firm? 7. Which, to your mind, has the greater A | I B j - influence on you in making a good grade: I 1 ' ' w-y/v S/ lL= (A) the instructor, or (B) the subject Jf U matter of a course? 4. If you were'a contestant on a quiz | program which of these question ^ h L categories would you prefer: (A) popular songs of today, or (B) current events? - 8. Do you believe that the saying “haste makes waste” is (A) always true, or A (B) often false? □ Cl 9. Which would weigh more heavily in your choice of filter cigarettes: (A) the opinions of friends with similar tastes, or (B) your own considered judgment? It is usually the case that men and women who really think for themselves come around to VICEROY as their brand of filter cigarette ... for two very good reasons: VICEROY is the one cigarette that gives them a thinking man’s filter and a smoking man’s taste. *1/ you checked (B) on any six of the nine ^ .y " questions . . . you really think for yourself! © 1959, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. Familiar pack or crush- proof box. The Man Who Thinks for Himself Knows- ONLY VICEROY HAS A THINKING MAN’S FILTER ... A SMOKING MAN’S TASTE!