I r Page 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Thursday, March 10, 1960 Debate End May Come In Senate WASHINGTON UP)— The Sen ate votes today on a petition to clamp a time-limit on its civil rights debate, now in its fourth week and likely to continue. Almost simultaneously, the House starts debate on a civil rights bill that is far less objec tionable to Southern opponents than the measure before the Sen ate. The vote in the Senate was for ced by a group of self-styled lib erals against the advice of the leaders of both parties, and de feat of the effort was widely pre dicted. The vote was ordered on a pe tition of 31 senators to invoke the Senate’s' cloture rule under which each senator’s speaking time would be limited to one hour. The rule, not successfully in- Local TB Group Sets 1960 Campaign Goal at $6,000 A $6,000 goal for the 1960 Easter Seal campaign in Brazos Valley was announced today. by Mrs. Clarence Kemp, general chairman. Mrs. Kemp said the goal repre sents the amount needed if crippled children are to continue receiving rehabilitationservices from the Brazos County Society for Crippled Children and if direct aid is to be extended to other handicapped children not now receiving it. The campaign opens March 17 and continues through Easter Sun day, April 17. Mrs. Kemp urged all residents of Brazos Valley to watch for their Easter Seals in the mail and to respond generously to the appeal. “The Brazos County Society for Crippled Children has assisted thousands of crippled children through Easter Seal contributions over the years,” she said. “In 1959 Easter Seal services helped more than 77 boys and girls who live in Brazos, Grimes, Burle son, Bobertson, Washington and Madison counties,” Mrs. Kemp added. Approximately 66 per cent of the funds contributed to the Easter Seal appeal finance services within * Brazos County and the remainder helps support a national program of direct service, education and research, said Mrs, King. Rodenhiser To Address Seminar Dr. H. A. Rodenhiser, assistant administrator of the USD A Agri cultural Research Service, will address the March 15 meeting of the Department of Plant Physi ology and Pathology Seminar. Rodenhiser’s subject will be “Opportunities In Research With the Agricultural Service of the U. S. Department of Agriculture.” His talk will be heard in Room 107 of the Biological Sciences Building and starts at 7:30 p.m. Dr. Wayne Hall, head of the Department of Plant Physiology and Pathology, said the meeting will be of interest to all students in agriculture, as well as those planning a career in research. ' BASEBALL CAPS All Colors Now At LOUPOT’S voked since 1927, can be put into effect only by a two-thirds ma jority vote of the senators pres ent. The Senate agreed to meet five hours in advance of the vote, with each side to be allotted equal time to make its arguments. Sen. Richard B. Russell (D-Ga) : leader of a band of 18 Southern senators fighting against civil rights legislation, denounced the move as an attempt at gag rule. His forces had carried on a full- scale filibuster through around- the-clock sesisons which started Feb. 29 after the first two weeks of debate. The nonstop sessions ended by agreement Tuesday might and are not expected to be resum ed even if lengthy debate contin ues. Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D-Ill) and Jacob K. Javitts (R-NY), chief sponsors of the cloture pe tition argued the Senate must show it cannot be immobilized by a small minority. However, they made no advance claims of victory. Bcfth Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex) and Minority Leader Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill) called the move to shut off the debate premature. Some i’senators believe the Sen ate is likely to wind up by faking the House bill if it is not greatly changed. But it will not reach the Senate for another week. In its present form, the House measure includes only four of the seven sections in the administra tion bill' before the Senate , and even these have been toned down in several respects. However, the House is expected to adopt an amendment providing for court-appointed referees to protect Negro voting rights—an administration proposal already included in the Dirksen bill. The House bill, unlike the Sen ate measure, would not give con gressional backing to the Supreme Court’s 1954 school integration de cision. Nor would it set up by law a commission to seek elimination of racial discrimination in em ployment by government contrac tors. These provisions have drawn some of the Southern senators’ sharpest criticism. Efforts to add these and other provisions un doubtedly will be made in the House, however. The Goethals Bridge between Elizabeth, N. J., and Staten Island, N. Y., honors Gen. George W. Goe thals, builder of the Panama Ca nal. Speciol low-cost HOOVER 7-POINT SERVICE: • MOTOR cleaned, lubricated, new carbon brushes. • AGITATOR or BRUSH ROU cleaned, lubricated. • BEIT replaced. • BAG completely renovated. O CORD, SWITCH,WIRING checked, tested. ® APPEARANCE improved. • CLEANING EFFICIENCY restored. WORK GUARANTEED ONE FULL YEAR fasf 48-hour service free pick KRAFT Furniture Co. Bryan Anita Joye Mowery — gives recital Sunday Piano Student Plans Concert Sunday in MSC Anita Joye Mowery, daughter of. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin C. Mowery will give her senior piano recital Sun day afternoon at 4 in the Memorial Student Center Assembly Room. A senior at A&M Consolidated High School, Miss Mowery is the piano student pf Mrs. J. B. Baty. For six successive years she has been rated superior in the National Guild Piano Auditions and for three years she has won first rating gold medal awards and cash prizes in the National Biennial Recording Festival. In the 1958 local Music Teacher’s Assn. Audition judged by Dean Henry Myers of Southwestern Uni versity at Georgetown, she won a superior rating. Last year she won an honoi’able mention in the Student Affiliate Assn, of the State Music Teacher’s Assn, and was asked to play at the group’s Houston convention. She is the accompanist for the A&M Consolidated High School Choir and has won a superior rating in the Piano Solo Division of the Interscholastic League Music Contest. The recital will be open to the public. ' Southern Filibuster Recalls Memories WASHINGTON )_The Southerners’ anti-civil rights fili buster brings to mind when Texas’ Tom Connally participated in such talkathons. Old timers around the Capitol recall that the now retired Texas senator probably reached the zen ith of his speaking career in de nouncing anti-lynch bills and other such legislations which came up in the 1930’s. None of the present crop of sen ators, it is generally conceded, are of the old school of rough and tumble, colorful debaters to which Connally belonged. Probably the nearest—but on the opposite side of the fence on civil rights issues and therefore not aiding the southern bloc, is Minnesota’s Hubert Humphrey, a candidate for the Democratic pres idential nomination. When the word spread that Con nally was speaking or about to speak in opposition to one of those measures which now bear the gen eral classification of “civil rights” legislation, the Senate Chamber would fill quickly. With a skillful change in pace, Connally at times would address a foe in mellifluous and flattering terms, then in an abrupt switch burst forth with a stinging denunc iation dfe, bis opponent’s views if npt at the foe himself. Perhaps only one other Texan equalled is not surpassed Connal- ly’s reputation, as a Congressional —Joseph Weldon Bailey. Born Oct. 6, 1862 near Crystal Springs, Miss., Bailey moved to Gainesville, Tex., in 1885. He was succeeded in the House by Speaker Sam Rayburn. Bailey served in the House from 1891 to 1901, then went to the Sen ate for 10 years. He returned to the Housp in 1911 and served there until resigning, to be succeeded by Rayburn in 1913. He died in a courtroom in Sherman in 1929 while defending a client. No one now is left in the House who served with Bailey, but the old timers still recall his oratorical feats. Rep. W. R. (Bob) Poage of Waco recalls hearing Bailey mak ing a speech in Waco in 1919, dur ing an 'unsuccessful campaign against Pat Neff for the governor ship. “I was a student at Baylor Uni versity at the time,” Poage said. “I can hear him now as he spoke in great, rolling tones. In his words he was pleading for the ‘great principles which I believe to be fundamental.’ And he pro nounced it ‘fund-dye-mental.’ ” In later years two other Texans who served only in the House (Connally, like Bailey, served in both bodies) gained reputations for eloquence far and beyond that of the average. They are Fritz Lanham of Ft. Worth and Martin Dies Jr. of Lufkin, both now re tired. According to historical accounts, Sam Houston was a man of con siderable note when it came to speaking on the senate floor. Wildlife Group Collects Forms Of Aquatic Life Over 3,000 forms of aquatic life were collected by six students of Wildlife Management, March 5, when they seined portions of the Wallaceville-Anahuac area of the Trinity River, according to Dr. R. J. Baldauf, assistant professor of the Department of Wildlife Management. . y Baldauf said the specimens had been collected in connection with a project to plot the growth:curve of certain freshwater fish aind to study their distribution along with salinity, river’s temperature and dissolved oxygen content. The fresh water icthyology course calls for numerous field trips before the project will be completed. Teams of six students, under the direction of Dr. Baldauf, will alternate their one-day vigils at the 1 river. The 3,000 forms of mollusces, shrimp, crabs and fish will be identified, measured and then added to the specimen collection in the laboratory of the Depart ment of Wildlife Management. The collection, the largest in the Southwest, contains specimens of 12.000 amphibians, 20,000 fish and 6.000 each of birds and mammals. KQDL KROSSWORD No. 7 ACROSS DOWN 1. The sack 1. Boring part of 4. The woman you a Mother 2. London, Paris, Rome, etc. 3. Tree sickness 4. The Magic of 13. Yours and mine a Kool and all the rest 5 Ex-governor’s 15. Old college nickname left behind 8. Part of a lake 12. Yours and mine 16. Winnings at s? 6. Was introduced tennis? 17. Short change 19. Girl in “Lilac Time” 20. Era’s cousin 21. Soak flax 22. Kind of active 23. Give in 24. Fresco’s first name 25. Bug-in-a-rug- like 28. Soreness 32. Polly’s last name 7. Air Raid Precautions (abbr.) 8. Nothing’s as as Kool 9. When your heart’s 10. Ready for Salome’s dance 11. It’s good for the heir 14. Short year 18. Neck 23. Earthy cleavage 25. Hivy leagues XT . .. 26. A Friday diet ' Tea Kool 27 ’ African country, you goose 37. Ever loving 2 9. When it’s time 89. Valedictorian f or a condition change to Kools 40. Changes start- 30- In this place ing in Nevada 31 CalIg a halt 42. New (prefix) legally 43. Arranged an 33. Maria’s evening’s last name entertainment 54, Dodge (3 words) 35 ; i n { an t’s first 44. Blank space position 45. Hollywood VIP 36. German city 46. Sparkle 38. Man on his mark 47. French 41. Seventh conjunctions Greek letter 1 2 □ ■ n 5 6 7 m 8 9 10 11 7i~ m' 3 14 15 4 16 17 18 "are you kgdl I ENOUGH TO KRACK THIS?"| 19 '26 1 21 22 ' ’HH SB 23 H er H m m ( ■ 1 m 25 26 27 W qg 1 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 ~40~ 41 42 7~ 44 45“ B 46 47 When your throat tells you its time for a change, you need a real change... YOU NEED THE of KQDL - ©1960, Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. CIGARETTES PEANUTS By Charles M. Schuli Maryland Club COFFEE (With $2.50 Purchase or More) LB. 49 Gladiola FLOUR (Limit One) 5 LB. BAG 29, Gladiola BISCUITS (Limit Six) CAN 5 Mayfield’s Grade A EGGS (Medium) ^ DOZEN 90 Southern Sim Orange Juice 6-6-Oz. $1.00 Banquet Meat Pies beef, chicken or turkey 5 ■ 8-Oz. $1.00 Hormel Spam 12-Oz. Cans 39c Hormel Vienna Sausage 5 Cans $1.00 Hormel Chili 2 No. 2 Cans $1.00 Del Monte Spinach 2-303 Cans 25c Argo Lima Beans 3-303 Cans 49c Sugary Sam Yams 2Lg.2 1 / 4 Cans 35c Diamond Tomatoes . 2-303 Cans 25c Del Monte Fruit Cocktail ... 4-303 Cans $1.00 Rosedale Peaches 4 Lg. 2i/> Cans $1.00 Green Giant English Peas 2-303 Cans 35c • ’j' Elcor Tissue Roll 5c Adolphus Rice 2 Lb. Box 29c Washburn Pinto Beans . . . . . . 2 Lb. Bag 25c Jet Quality Dog Food 10 Cans $1.00 BANANAS Valley Sweet Oranges Fresh Texas Cabbage Russet Potatoes No. 1 Golden m Beauties lu. m m C 8 5 lb. bag 29c lb. 3 c 10 lb. bag 49c Armour Star Fancy •*7 FRYERS sub 28 / J 8 >**'•' £ If j / »r' V Baby Beef Round STEAK lb-79< . w Hormel Dairy Bacon Range Brand Bacon 2 lbs. 69c Fresh Homemade Pork Sausage ib. 39c Fresh Frozen Jumbo Shrimp ib. 89c SPECIALS GOOD MARCH 10-11-12, 1960 MILLER'S 3800 TEXAS AVENUE SUPER MARKET VI 6-6613