page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, November 3, 1960 THE BATTALION BY HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT 32 - Page Travel Brochure Released For State Tourists Special To The Battalion AUSTIN—The release of a full- color, 32-page travel brochure on the State of Texas was announced today by the Texas Highway De partment. D. C. Greer, state highway en gineer, said the new brochure is specifically designed for free dis tribution to attract out-of-state tourists. First of its kind ever ‘published in Texas, it is intended to serve as a showcase of Texas’ [scenic, historic, recreational and [cultural attractions, i Greer described the colorful bro chure, which covers the entire state [geographically, as “another mile- jstone in the travel promotion pro- jgram conducted by the Highway [Department.” Next Highway Step [ He said the next step in this ; program is the submission of a [media advertising budget to the Texas Legislature, which meets in January. The Highway Depart ment has asked,-, with the concur rence of the Texas Development Board, ifor an appropriation of $300,00^ a year , for the, next two years tb sUvert^se the £ta$tst tractiorfe, ok "[Texas The■ {nedjp . .advertising :pro-r gram,” C teer|sai|, a igiectessity tile ifowAward halt trend of the Texas tourist indus try. The amount we will ask for media advertising ($300,000 a year) is the minimum required to shore up the rapid decline in tour ist revenue which Texas now faces.” Greer reviewed the progress made in establishing a tourist pro motion program in Texas. He not ed that in the past Texas had been unable to compete for tourists by advertising because it was prohib ited by the State Constitution. A constitutional amendment was ap proved by popular vote in 1958 al lowing the advertisement of the state’s tourist resources. Now Authorized The Texas Legislature in 1959 set up the legal machinery autho rizing state media advertising and delegating the responsibility for this program to the Texas High way Department. Senate Bill 152 stated that funds for media ad vertising must come from the Gen eral Fund, but no money was made available in 1959 for this purpose. Greer expressed confidence Sthat funds iqr state advertising., would btj majie available by^ the 1 coming session of the Legislature. “IJ M, amendment authorizing state ad vertising, the Legislature will fol low this mandate from the people by providing adequate funds for an effective media advertising pro gram,” Greer said. 20 Years Behind Texas has fallen “twenty years behind the times” in advertising its tourist attractions, said Tom H. Taylor, Director of the Travel and Information Division of the Highway Department. He pointed out that revenue from the tourist trade had fallen to a low of $431 million in 1959, a drop of $100 mil lion in only two years. This rapid drop, he said, is attributed to the- advertising campaigns of other states competing for tourists. Noting that tourists currently pay some $17 million annually in direct state taxes, Taylor said an effective media advertising pro gram could increase tourist reve nue brought to Texas and lighten to some extent the state’s heavy tax load. “The tourist in Texas is good for everybody,” Taylor declared. “The money he brings into our else- Mine Fields Ring Guantanamo ‘Just In Case,’ Navy Says iat since thp, people of .Texas muni ties to b^^pasig^ around ade'their wishes known by vot-^ arhopg' all. ! i^g&rdleks5 # of f -;t3rade or gbfavorab]yVpn v tbe,co n stitutipnalTpTefeSsiond’j FIRESTONE SAFETY CHAM* PRICED FROM * NYLON S/F, Safety Fortified body 0 ^ U K * Firestone’s precision-bladed tread 10 UP '‘ r America’s favorite NYLON I Ur replacement tire Plus fa* aoo ^ ^] SQ ava ;i a bi e i n a wide range of recappable tire s j zes j n ra y 0n an d tubeless construction SEE PRICE BOX SIZE BLACK* WHITE* 6.00-16 16.95 — 6.70-15 17.45 23.45 7.10-15 21.95 26.95 7.60-15 23.95 28.95 8.00-15 — 31.95 All Other Sizes and »IbL> Types Low Priced Easy Payday Terms •Plus tax and recappable tire FIRESTONE NYLON CHAMPION a nylon tire of unmatched quality at these pricef * S/F NYLON cord body * Rugged 7-rib tread * Firestone Rubber-X for long money-saving mileage plus tax and recappable tire Buy on Easy Payday Terms SIZE BUCK* WHITE* 6.00-16 13.95 17.45 6.70-15 13.95 17.45 7.10-15 15.95 19.95 7.60-15 17.95 21.95 7.50-14 Tubeless 15.95 19.45 ’’tap ’riii Point Pen Notiiing to buy. Qriv c in get vour? Awfc Ruff Contoured tit, ugh front floor “hump Choice of coion. Do You? Christmas Shopping Here WeVe Scmtf* €!au‘ Approved Something for every mem ber rf the family...selected gift items from the Tvorb ’ foremost manufacti icrs. NOW is the time to buy. Geo. Shelton, Inc College Ave. at 33rd FREE PARKING TA 2-0139 - TA 2-0130 By The Associated Press HAVANA—The Navy’s chief in the Caribbean disclosed Wednesday that American mine fields were planted a few weeks ago along the fence enclosing the 45-square-mile Guantanamo Naval Base—just in case. “The mine fields are labeled plainly,” Rear Adm. Allen Smith, commander of the 10th Naval Dis trict, told reporters at the base. “Dr. Castro has stepped up his tempo and we have taken steps accordingly. We have made our defense a little tighter.” He said his forces at the base are strong enough to repel any attack until reinforcements can be sent—perhaps for 72 hours. The defenders are a few hundred U. S. Marines, squadrons of Marine and Navy aircraft that come for training, destroyers usually an chored in the bay or close by, and almost every one of the few thou sand military men staffing the base. “We are hoping they will not bother us,” said Smith. “But we are ready if they do.” The Guantanamo base, rather - than Central America and Florida, now commands the attention of Cuban leaders in what seems to be a desperate search for an in vasion that doesn’t come. President Osvaldo D o r t i c o s spelled this out here Tuesday night before a gathering of presidential \■ » - ' / -T? i - palace employees. He said Presi dent Eisenhower’s announced firm sta S d 0 $.!l an & na W w ¥, in ^ nd ; ed only to justify “art armed aggres sion agrtinst our country.” Doi Meo's implied th^t’-the' United States’ lease on the big naval base can be ahroftatj^ j/iApiit any meed for U. S. consent, which is counter STOLEN HORSE STUMBLED to the American stand. “Have these gentlemen in Wash ington forgotten that all that is needed is the agreement of the Cuban people?” he asked. Both Prime Minister Fidel Cas tro and Foreign Minister Raul Roa asserted earlier that Guantanamo is now the center of agression against Cuba. One Cuban revolutionary leader after another has shouted that in vasion is just around the corner and that “every Cuban must be ready to shed his or her blood to defend the nation' against .Yankee imperialism.” Invasion watching and waiting is felt on both sides of the long fence that winds around the Guan tanamo Bay installation. “The situation is tense because we are in a position of waiting for someone else to do something,” said Smith. Cuban leaders have definitely shifted the emphasis in the propa ganda that bombards the Cuban public to keep them alert and loyal to the Castro regime. The main theme of the- invasion warnings that went throughout Cuba a week ago was that men, ships and planes allegedly were being grouped in Guatemala—all set for an attack on Cuba. Ex-Con Cought In Laredo After Week-Long Manhunt WEEKEND (Continued from Page 1) , tories earlier in the semester, but tickets will be available at the door for $5 and presentation of student indentification cards. By The Associated Press LAREDO, Texas — Curtis Lee Jones, 38-year-old Arkansas ex convict accused of murder, rape and kidnaping, surrendered with out a struggle Tuesday after the stolen horse on which he was at tempting to escape stumbled and fell. Jones, object of an intensive week-long manhunt, was captured on the Callahan Ranch, 20 miles north of Laredo. He threw up his hands after a member of a posse fired a shot gun blast over his head. He later told newsmen he had lost his loaded .22 caliber pistol when thrown from the horse. The shotgun blast was fired by State Highway Patrolman Jack Carpenter, one of the four officers summoned to the ranch after being notified that Jones had forced a woman living on the ranch to feed him. “I was coming in to give my self up,” Jones later told a news man. “I thought they were going to kill me. If he hadn’t shot at me I would have surrendered any how.” The capture ended a giant man hunt started six days ago after he kidnaped his 21-year-old cousin and her m^^qrnpanion in Fort Worth, tried to strangle the man with a rope and raped the young woman, and the!} .kidnaped an ex- nine hours later and Jones dis-1 Jones said that after he freed appeared on foot. Mrs. Sosa and Carlos Guardarra- The manhunt switched to Laredo mas, the pair kidnaped in San Monday when Jones abducted a | Antonio, he drove down a side road j^A. —g#- The “blast,” sponsored by the pectant mother and her baby Dalla'^AMiJ' Cftib,‘ has had many months of .pfenning to go into it, and from all rmiicatiens^should be “one for thg books!” . ik || m ■ daughter from a rural home west of Fort Worth* The young mother and child were freed unharmed in San Antonio woman tavern owner and one of her employees in San Antonio, drove southward toward the Mexi can border and freed the pair out side Laredo. Jones told his captors he hid in an all-white car taken from the San Antonio woman, Mrs. Rosa linda Sosa, 30, in a clump of brush on the big Callahan Ranch. John Ardnt, ranch manager, told officers Jones turned up at one of the houses on the ranch about 2 p.m. Tuesday, waved a pistol and ordered the housewife to feed him. After he ate, the housewife asked Jones to let her go and, to her surprise, he did. She hurried 5 miles to the main ranch house and Ardnt notified the Highway Patrol. When the officers arrived, Jones dashed to a horse he had left sad dled and tried to escape across a pasture. The horse stumbled, throwing Jones to the ground, but he bounced up running. Then Carpenter, after shouting for him to halt, cut loose with a shotgun blast. Jones hesitated, whirled around and raised his hands in the air. The four officers quickly hand cuffed and chained their prisoner and brought him to Laredo. .' He was dressed in a red-striped Western style shirt and olive green pants. FBI agents joined sheriff’s offi- . cers and ^ijafe patrolmen in ques tioning the prisoner. outside Laredo Tuesday. He said he hid Mrs. Sosa’s white car under some brush and spent the day in the car. Once he heard a radio broadcast by Sheriff Por- firio Flores of Laredo urging him to surrender. Leaving the car, he walked about 15 miles north to the home of Mrs. Cristobal Armendarez on the Callahan Ranch. Mrs. Armendarez, whose hus band works as a fence rider on the ranch, said Jones demanded food. He later said the bowl of beans she served him was all he had eat en since Monday morning. FOOD BUYSmSM YOUR FOOD DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT MILLER’S. YOU SAVE PENNIES ON ITEM AFTER ITEM THAT •SOON AMOUNTS TO BIG SAYINGS. OUR LOW EVERY DAY PRICES AND THE BEST SPECIALS IN TOWN. SHOP MILLER’S AND SAVE YOUR CASH. IMPERIAL SUGAR PEPSI COLA'S TIDE COFFEE ELCOR TISSUE LIMIT ONE PLUS DEPOSIT 5 LB. BAG 12 FOR WASHING POWDERS MARYLAND CLUB GIANT BOX LIMIT ONE LB. ROLL 45 45 65 59 5< SEE OUR BIG $1.00 LIBBY’S SALE ON FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Brazos Valley Fancy FRYERS whole Lb. 28 c ROAST lean Crown Lb. 35 c BABY BEEF SHOULDER STEAK HORMEL SAUSAGE little sizzlers FRESH PORK RIBS HORMEL DAIRY SLICED BACON serve belter Golden BANANAS *9 Valley Sweet Red GRAPEFRUIT Russett POTATOES 5 lb. bag 39 c 10 \b- bag 49 c LETTUCE Fresh Jumbo Head 15c APPLES Extra Fancy Red lb. 19c Pick Up FREE Tickets To The Campus and Circle Theatre This Week-end With Your Grocery Purchases. SPECJAIS GOOD NOVEMBER 3-4-5, 1960 * 3800 TEXAS AVENUE SUPER MARKET VI 6-6613 * * SCA Awards Announced For New Year Student composer's residing any where in the Western Hemisphere are eligible to win awards totalling $11,500 in the 1960 Student Com posers Awards (SCA), it has been announced by^Caarl Haverlin, Pres ident of Broadcast Music, Inc. BMI annually sponsors the com petition designed to encourage the creation of concert music by young composers. The 1960 contest is the second in which composers from countries other thaja the United States and Canada are'eligible to cofnpete. . . m* . ; “We are pleased that our deci sion to extend SCA to the entire Western Hemisphere, made with the approval of the National Judg ing Panel, showed immediate and impressive results,” Mr. Haverlin said. “Two of the six young com. posers who received awards thif year were from South America—c> Mario Davidovsky of Argentina, and David Serendero Proust of Chile.” With the 1960 awards, more than $65,000 will have been pro vided by BMI during the past nine years to SCA winners. Announce ment of the 1960 awards will be made no later than June, 1961, with sums ranging from $500 to $2,000 to be granted at the discre tion of the judges. SCA 1960 is open until Feb. 15, 1961, to residents of any country in the Western Hemisphere who will be under twenty-six (26) years of age on Dec. 31, 1960. Entrants must be enrolled in accredited sec ondary schools, colleges or conser vatories, or engaged in private study with recognized and estab lished teachers. CORPS SENIORS and MILITARY STAFFS Aggieland Portrait Schedule CORPS SENIORS AND OUTFIT FIRST SERGEANTS will have their portrait made for the “Aggie- land ’61” according tef the fol lowing schedule. Portraits will be made in Class A winter uni form at the AGGIELAND STU- a C L between the hours of 8 A. M. and 5 P. M. Executive officers and 1st ser- P’ ea T 1 |s W *R have portrait made m GH cap. Commanding officers will have ^•PLEASE MAKE AP- PONTMENT FOR THESE LENGTH PORTRAITS, AT THE STUDIO. Nov. 2 . 3 Squadrons 5, 6, 7, 8 Nov. 3 - 4 Squadrons 9, 10, 11, Nov. 7 -8 Squadrons 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 Nov. 8 - 9 Maroon & White Band i n the corps on any I™UJ 0TH . JUNIORS AND SENIORS, will have their por- ’c?>> made f° r the “Aggieland bl according to the following schedule. Nov. 9 - 10 Corps Staff, Cons. Band Staff Nov. 10-11 1st Brigade, 1st and 2nd Battle Group Staffs Nov. 14 - 15 2nd Brigade, 3rd, 4th, and 5th Battle Group Staffs Nov. 16 - 17 1st Wing, 1st, 2nd Group Staffs Nov. 16 - 17 2nd Wing, 3rd and 4Ui Group Staffs