The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 20, 1960, Image 2

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    THE BATTALION
Page 2 College Station, Texas Friday, May 20, 1960
BATTALION EDITORIALS
. . . Journalism Which Succeeds Best —and Best
Deserves Success— Fears God and Honors Man; Is
Stoutly Independent, Unmoved by Pride of Opinion
or Creed of Power . , . Walter Williams
Inadequate
Texas A&M students have opened their hearts and dis
played sympathy and loyalty to fellow students and their
friends. This criteria was displayed in the donation to the
family of Miss Carole Shirley of San Antonio, who was kill
ed en route to the Senior Ring Dance here this past week
end.
Right at $1,275 was collected in the drive to present to
the family of the girl. Her death had put the already strick
en family — the father is an invalid — under even more
hardship.
The gift was inadequate, to say the least, when meas
ured with a human life. But such was not the aim of the
students who contributed to the cause. Theirs was the task
of doing what was possible for the parents after the passing
of their daughter.
Efforts displayed in the impromptu collection would
doubtless equal any on any college or university campus any
where.
Highest congratulations to the students who participa
ted in the drive. Their help has been a token aid to the mis
fortune of fellow students.
CADET SLOUCH
by Jim Earle Backers Sure Of Pushing
School Construction Aid Bill
6
6
he’s sorta anxious to be a sophomore.”
Demos Appeal To Party
To Break SS Stalemate
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON—Backers of a
school construction aid bill that
has been cleared for House ac
tion are confident they can push
it through.
But opponents have their own
ideas about pushing. - As Rep.
Graham A. Barden (D-N.C.) put
it:
“The federal government ought
to keep its nose out of education
and I’m not going to be the one
to push it in.”
The 975-million-dollar measure
edged past the Rules Committee
Thursday 7-5 for floor action
next Wednesday. It would pro
vide 325 million dollars yearly for
each of the next three years—
solely for school construction.
After the first year, states would
have to match federal funds.
The Senate already has passed
a greatly different school aid
bill. It would authorize $1,800,-
000,000 in grants wer a two-
year period, giving states the
right to use money for teachers
salaries as well as construction.
In the past, the House con
sistently has refused to grant
money for local schools except
for school districts with many
federal employes.
The Eisenhower administration
has proposed that instead of
making grants, the federal gov-,
ernment underwrite state school
* ■H3!2I2EEiZE3nEi
+ DRIVE-IN
/THEATRE
Aii-fRrt
FRIDAK
“THE JAYWALKERS”
With Jeff Chandler
Also
“THE TINGLERS”
With Vincent Price
SATURDAY
“WHITE HUNTRESS”
‘TANK COMMANDOS”
“GOOD DAY FOR A
HANGING”
and
4 Cartoons
SUNDAY
Walt Disney’s
“DARBY O’GILL AND THE
LITTLE PEOPLE”
Also
“IT HAPPENED TO JANE”
With Doris Day
bonds for five years and pay half
the interest and carrying charges.
This proposal is expected to be
offered as a substitute when the
House bill comes to the floor.
CIRCLE
TONIGHT AND SATURDAY
Fred MeMurray
“OREGON TRAIIf
Also
“HAVE ROCKET
WILL TRAVEL”
TODAY THRU SATURDAY
Kirk Douglas
• “ ULYSSES”
Also
“CHANCE MEETING”
Again, But...
The possibility of Texas A&M having coeds in the fu
ture received its biggest boost ever in the opinion given yes
terday by the 10th Court of Civil Appeals.
The court again stopped the admission of women into
the all-male college, but declared that a Bryan woman should
be allowed to attend Texas A&M if she seeks a course in
floriculture leading to a degree. The basis of this opinion
came from the fact that Texas A&M is the only state sup
ported school offering a degree in the course she sought.
There may be more to the opinion than meets the eye,
however, as the coed issue has been progressing favorably
in the direction of their admission during the past year.
Despite the arguments that Texas A&M is an all-male col
lege, operated under military rules, the chances of admit
ting women to the institution are still in a position of going
either way. Still the recent decisions of the courts have
been somewhat toward the admission of coeds, as evidenced
particularly yesterday.
This decision could be another in the slow process of
eventually admitting coeds to the 84-year-old all-male col
lege.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Democratic
backers of a Social Security
health plan for the aged talked
today of an appeal to the party
leadership to break a stalemate.
The House Ways and Means
Committee Thursday climaxed
nearly two months of closed-
door sessions with a series of
test votes on health legislation.
Unable to muster a majority for
any of the various proposals, it
finally voted 13-12 to have one
drafted in detail for study in a
week.
There was general agreement
this vote did not represent even
tentative acceptance of the plan,
a state-federal program offered
by the committee chairman, Wil
bur D. Mills (D-Ark.).
Later, one of the backers of
the proposal for a hospitaliza
tion and nursing home program
tied to Social Security retire
ment said he expects its pro
ponents to seek a conference
with Speaker Sam Rayburn
(D-Tex.).
Rayburn, without endorsing the
specific Social Security plan of-
fei’ed by Rep. Aime J : . Forand
(D-R.I.), has indicated he favors
the principle of health benefits
for the aged financed through
an increased Social Security tax.
The Forand bill, first of the
old age health plans to come to
public attention, has inspired
strong support by union groups
and determined opposition by the
The Firing Line
It’s like being bitten to death by a duck. . . .
Unprecedented
A rash of posters on trees and signs on campus appear
ed over the past two days, advertising the services of local
bookstores. Displays of this type is unprecedented in recent
years.
Not only do these posters deface the campus, they are
\ flagrant display of someone’s disregard for the beauty of
A&M at a time when visitors are beginning to flock to the
fampus for the events which mark the closing of school each
year.
The owners of these stores must not realize that some
of the places they are placing their posters are also Memor
ials, such as the trees around the main drill field.
There should be other more lucrative ways of plying a
trade than pasting stickers on the trees on the campus.
Read Rattalion Classifieds
ip**
ATTENTION JUNIORS
20 Pr. Senior Boots $15 - $25.
20 Pr. Serge Boot Pants and
20 Pr. Pink Boot Pants $5 - $9.95
SOME SERGE SHIRTS AVAILABLE.
A Few Sabers In All Lengths
LOUPOTS
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu-
lent 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 Publications, chairman; Dr. A. L. Bennett, School of Arts and Sciences; Dr.
K. J. Koenig, School of Engineering; Otto R. Kunze, School of Agriculture: and Dr.
8 D. McMurry School of Veterinary Medicine.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M. is published in College
Station, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods,
September through May, and once a week during summer school.
itered
1 as second-class
at the Post Office
jllege Station, Texas,
r the Act of Con-
of March 8, 1870.
MEMBER:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Assn.
Represented nationally by
N a t i o n a 1 Advertising
Services, Inc., New York
City, Chicago. Los An
geles and San Francisco.
(EDITOR’S NOTE: The fol
lowing letter was addressed to
W T . D. (Pete) Hardesty, student
organizations adviser, in refer
ence to the recent Parents’ Day
weekend activities on the cam
pus).
W. D. Hardesty,
College Station, Texas:
I want to express my apprecia
tion to you and the Student Sen
ate and all students of Texas
A&M for the great honor you
have bestowed upon me, being se
lected “Honor Mother of the
Year,” and for one of the hap
piest weekends of my life. I
thoroughly enjoyed every minute
of it as I have enjoyed every
thing I hai^e done for Bill (Curry)
in the past four years. There
have been many heartaches and
obstacles to overcome as well as
many happy moments. Please
convey my sincere thanks to
everyone responsible for this
wonderful, happy moment of my
life.
Mrs. Fred Curry,
Honor Mother of the Year
SHARE YOUR
WEALTH
We are not socialistic but we do believe
you can share your wealth of knowledge with
another Aggie by placing your old textbook on
the market. (He might draw the same profes
sor you had this semester!)
On second thought, perhaps you should
keep that personally annotated copy. It might
be worth its weight in gold to you sometime
in the future.
On the other hand — if you are not in
terested in gold — and feel you have to lighten
your payload on the long trek home—to MOM’S
COOKING—we would welcome the opportuni
ty to bid on the book.
Our offer will be the “FAIR MARKET
VALUE” and par for the course.
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
ipontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter here
in are also reserved.
Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester, $6 per school year, $6.60 per full year.
Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion Room 4. YMCA,
College Station, Texas.
News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-8618 or VI 6-4910 or at the H
'rfitorial office. Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6416.
BILLHICKLIN EDITOR |
Joe Callicoatte Sports Editor I
Bob Sloan, Alan Payne News Editors I
Tommy Holbein Feature Editor ■
Ben Trial, Lewis Reddell, Nelson Antosh and A1 Vela Staff writers j I
Joe Jackson and Ken Coppage Photographers !
THE EXCHANGE STORE
“Serving Texas Aggies Since 1907”
American Medical Assn.—which
also opposes the proposals made
later.
Show Opens At 6 p. m. Friday
Saturday & Sunday at 1 p. m.
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Preview Saturday Night
10:30 p. m.
Also Sunday
TODAY & SATURDAY
Doris Day
“PLEASE DON’T EAT
THE DAISIES”
Saturday Night Prev 11 p. m.
Also Sunday - Tuesday
QUEEN
NOW SHOWING
COLOR BY DE LUXE
EMM
; m m iciAN
Sir Isaac Newton is struck
by another great ideal .
As sure as little apples, Newton knew that what goes up must come down.
But when it comes down to a
really pleasurable filter ciga
rette, it’s what goes up—m front
of the filter, that is—that makes
the difference!
And there’s where Winston
had an inspired idea — Filter-
Blend! Winston specially selects
choice, mild tobaccos, then spe
cially processes them for filter
smoking. The result: Filter-
Blend up front of a modern fil
ter. That’s what makes Winston
a complete filter cigarette.
Filter-Blend also makes
Winston America’s best-selling,
best-tasting filter cigarette.Take
it from Sir Isaac:
‘ ‘ You don't have to be hit on the head to know that
Winston tastes good like a cigarette should!”
R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO.. WINSTON-SALEM. N. C*
PEANUTS
By Charles M. Schuh