The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 02, 1961, Image 4

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    Page 4
College Station, Texas
Thursday, March 2, 1&61
THE ^ TTALI0N Five Students
Given PLC
Calvert Quartet of LSU
. one of ten ITS acts contracted
ITS APPROACHING
(Continued From Page 1)
gie Talent Show with his comedy
monologue in true Shelly Berman-
type character.
Clyde Bateman will he repre
senting Tfexas Tech in the festive
event, with his Bobby Darin-style
singing. Bateman is winner of
prizes at Dallas’ radio station,
KLIF, and “Raider Rambles” at
Texas Tech. He is a vocalist with
the college stage band, and is a
freshman architecture major.
jvOther acts on the show will in
clude a dance trio from SMU, the
“Trio Columbia” from the Univer
sity of Texas and Johnny Knowles
of TCU performing on guitar.
Last but not least, Dorothy Mel
on from the University of Arkan
sas will “sing the blues,” and the
entire show will be emceed by
Schwartz and Bledsoe, comedy
team from the University of Okla
homa. The ITS begins at 7 p.m.
This event is no contest, just
good entertainment; last year it
was good enough to draw a crowd
of well over 5,000 people, and pros
pects look equally as good for this
year.
Several of the acts on the 10th
annual ITS will be featured on
“Town Talk,” KBTX-TV afternoon
program, on Friday before the
performance that night.
MRS. RICHARDS DINING HALL
“Where College Meets Bryan”
Home Cooked Meals—4410 College Main
LUNCH—11:00 a. m.-2:00 p. m. DINNER 5:00 p. m.-8:00 p. m.
“SERVED FAMILY STYLE”
ADULTS $1.00 CHILDREN UNDER 10— 50c
3 BLOCKS FROM NORTH GATE
Commies Locked In Closet
Until They Built The Bomb
By The Associated Press
MOSCOW—How did the Soviet
Union develop the atom bomb?
Well, says Soviet Premier Khru
shchev, it was like this: Scientists
were locked up in a room and be
fore they were let out they split
the atom.
The story was told by the Soviet
Premier i n a speech published
Wednesday.
The speech was given Feb. 23
in Moscow at a meeting of agri
cultural experts studying methods
to put the U.S.S.R. ahead of the
United States in food production.
As an object lesson and to show
the urgency of the problem,
Khrushchev told the delegates
about the old days when only
America had the atom bomb.
“At that time, American im
perialists had started their atom
policy of frightening Socialist
countries and first of all the Soviet
Union. That was a difficult time
for our country. But what did
our party and people do? They
called upon the best scientists,
physicians, mechanics, chemists,
mathematicians and specialists and
started working.”
Khrushchev drew on a Russian
folk tale attributed to the time of
Queen Elizabeth I of Britain to
get his point across.
“We have an interesting story
by Leskov,” Khrushchev said. “The
personage .of this story;Levsha,
was locked up and allowed to get
out only after he put shoes on a
flea given him by a British queen.
“Our workers in their labora
tories worked in the same manner.
They thought, calculated, experi
mented and at least reached their
goal. They split the atom.”
Rifle Awards
Five A&M students have been
presented Leatherneck Magazine
Rifle Marksmanship Awards as a
result of rifle-firing competition
last summer during Platoon Lead
ers Class training at Marine Corps
Schools, Quantico, Va.
Winners and their awards were
PLC’s Carlton W. Trant, III, Bat
talion Third Place; John F. Platt,
Company High Rifle; Donald W.
Cantrell, Company Second Place;
Harry F. Sharp, Jr., Company
Third Place, and James W. Rogers,
Company Runner-Up.
The awards were presented by
Dean of Students James P. Hanni-
gan. Also present for the cere
monies were Maj. M. Gordon
Daniels, USMCR, Marine Corps
On-Campus Officer Selection Liai
son Officer at A&M and Professor
of Economics; Col. Joe E. Davis,
Commandant, and Dorsey E. Mc-
Crory, Assistant to President Earl
Rudder.
Capt. Frederic L. Tolleson,
Marine Officer Selection Officer,
Houston, represented the Marine
Corps and Leatherneck Magazine.
Hamburger Fry
Planned For Fish
Freshmen wishing relaxation,
recreation and fellowship are
urged to attend the Fish hambur
ger fry to be sponsored by the
freshman YMCA Saturday at Hen-
sel Park.
Tickets to the outing are on sale
in the YMCA for 50 cents and
must be purchased before 5 p.m.
Thursday.
.200 PER CENT’
Congo Against Communism
African Leader Proclaims
By The Associated Press
LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo-
Premier Joseph Ileo heralded the
Congo’s new anti-Communist pact
as proof Congolese politicians can
tackle their own problems without
foreign help.
“The Congolese people are 200
per cent against communism,”
Ileo told a news conference
Wednesday.
Ileo firmly denied that the mili
tary pact he signed at Elisabeth-
ville with Katanga President Moise
Tshombe and President Albert
Kalonji of southern Kasai implied
any resognition of their claims to
independence. Nor does the fact
weaken President Joseph Kasa-
vubu’s claim to be the head of all
the Congo, he added.
The wiry little premier said he
hopes the leftist rebel leaders of
Stanleyville will attend the con
ference called for March 5 in Tan
anarive, Malagasy Republic, even
though these are the Communist
influences he is opposing.
“In that neutral atmosphere of
a friendly, land we should be able
to iron out our differences with
only a few days of discussions,”
Ileo said.
Antoine Gizenga, the Soviet-
supported rebel leader in Stanley
ville; his military strong man
Gen. Victor Lundula; and Anicet
Kashamura of Kivu Province have
been invited to attend. Gizenga
has given no indication of whether
he will accept.
It would be another step toward
solving the problem of reconcilia
tion or chaos on which U.N. Secre
tary-General Dag Hammarskjold
warned the Congo leaders in his
latest blast.
Cuban Youths
Shout Death
For Priests
By The Associated Press
HAVANA—Hundreds of school-
children screamed for the excu-
tion of Roman Catholic priests
Wednesday night at a demonstra
tion protesting the terrorist bomb
ing of a business school.
“For priests, execution wall,”
squealed the children in their high-
pitched voices after labor leader
Jose Maria de la Aguilera charged
that the “instruments of imperial
ism is found behind a child’s face
or under a priest’s cassock.”
Older demonstrators shouted,
“Priests, thieves, let ’em take off
their cassocks and put -on pants.”
Earlier, Cuban officials had
blamed the bombing Tuesday of
Nobel Academy, in which nine girl
students were injured, on “Yankee
imperialism.”
Two Catholic priests taking
commercial courses at the academy
and two other male students were
held for investigation.
Wednesday night’s protest dem
onstration, arranged by the Con
federation of Cuban Labor, was
held in front of the damaged
academy.
While insisting the Congolese
can work out their, own destiny
the Leopoldville government made
an outward show of compliance
with stiff new U.N. demands for*.'
cooperation by pledging to halt
Congolese army attacks on U.H, puirie
personnel here.
| for its
nation
In cloudy language, Interior
Minister Cyril Adoula told the
same news conference: “We
apply legality if necessary” as a
step in halting the wave of rape,
beatings, arrests and general han
assment that Congolese soldierj ,se ^
have inflicted on U.N. military
and civilian personnel.
jest am
bowl
il team
lore say
comps
me
fliers e
Adoula did not elaborate. Hiin®! ^
went on to demand that Unital (test an
Nations close up a camp in Leo
poldville, sanctuary for refugeo 1)' l° ss
sympathizers of the slain ex.
Premier Patrice Lumumba.
A new cloud appeared on tit
horizon.
ai
u scon
»f coul
A commission made up of 11
African and Asian nations tint
have contingents in the U, !i,
force reached Geneva to draft its
report of a survey of Congo prob
lems and a spokesman cast doubt
on Ileo’s authority.
The spokesman said the group
said that until both houses of Par
liament adopt a vote of confi
dence in Ileo, he cannot be re
garded as the Congo’s rightful
premier.
Supporters of Lumumba have
always claimed his faction com
manded majority support in Par
liament.
UTIl€ APS
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
One day 3<5 per word
2<! per word each additional day
t won
Minim
charge—40d
mm cnarge
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publicati^
Classified Display
Classified Display
80<S per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
FOR RENT
Attractive furnished three
apartment. Air-conditioned, c
shopping center. VI 6-6528.
garage
lient to
74tfn
Small well furnished apartment, ideal
for student who wants quiet place to study.
VI 6-7248. 61tfn
Furnished duplex apartment. Near North
Gate. Joe Speck, Walton Hall, Room H-8,
Box 873. 52tfn
220
Cro
6 p. m.
lartment,
near
aftei
after
61tfn
A one and two bedroom modern fur
nished apartment. Air conditioner if de
sired. Call after 4 p. m., TA 2-3627. 1300
Antone Street. 58tfn
Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric Sh
Shop.
98tfn
Two blocks from College Station Post
Office, completely furnished apartments,
four walk-in closets, good refrigerators
»nd stoves. VI 6-7248. 61tfn
• 24 Hour Wrecker Service
Whitley’s Auto Parts
WE BUY BURNED & WRECKED
CARS & TRUCKS
3 Miles West of Courthouse on
Highway 21
BRYAN, TEXAS
H. L. WHITLEY, JR.. OWNER
Phone TA 2-6840
FOR SALE
Washing machine, ideal for s
old, in good
ment, one
VI 6-6017.
Sugarman’s Uniforms of San A
will be shown at MSC by M
Nick Childs', Army (Ret.)
Uuality unitorms at prices in packa
deals that save you money. NO pi
ments until you are in receipt of yc
clothing allowance from Unde Si
with no interest or covering charge.
9 Mar—-Room 334 from 1500-21
10 Mar.—Senate Conf. Rm.—0800-21
Furniture Sale—Mattre
$10.00,
set $41
electric
95, vacuum cleane:
refrigerator $49.95,
•igerator $49.95, apartment
5, baby bed $19.95, fout
bedroom suite $39.95, student desk
BRYAN FURNITURE COMPANY,
from LaSalle Hotel.
FOR SALE OR RENT
207 Fidelity Street,
Phone Mrs. Cole, VI 6
be inspected.
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN S RADIO & TV
3i»3 W. 26th TA 2-2819
Early Bird Shoppe, Inc
Ridgecrest Village
^Jlotard6 (^ajeleria
Where the Art of
Cooking is not Lost
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
LOUPOTS
WORK WANTED
Would like to keep small child for work- 0
\- ing mother. Call VI 6-7568 3911 Glen Oaks f
3 Drive. 75t3 1
DAY NURSERY by the week, day or
hour. Call Mra. Gregory, 602 Boyett.
VI 6-4006. 120tfn
Will keep children in my home for
working mothers. Mrs. P. Johnnie Cooper,
D-5-Y College View. 53tfn
Expert typist, electric typewriter, Mra
Warren, Days, VI 6-4759, nights, week
ends, VI 6-8416. 47tft
Our nursery for children all ages. PicI
up and deliver. VI 6-8151. No answer call
back. 42tfr.
, Typing done. VI 6-7910. 21tfn
il
,e
E Why wait until last minute to get your
is Theses reports, etc. to Bi-City Secretarial
;e service? Electric typewriters, offset print- ■
i. ing, negatives and metal plates made.
3s 3408 Texas Afe. VI 6-5786. 87tfn
6 ’
HELP WANTED
l. Earn $135 weekly during summer travel- '
n ing overseas. MUST BE U. S. CITIZEN. »
3 Complete detail furnished. Send $1.00 c
Lansing Information Service, Dept. G-7, I
Box 74, New York 61. New York. 72tfn t
Part time radio and T.V. repairman.
Must have television experience. Gil’s
Radio and T.V., 101 Highland. 65tfn
LOST
Reward for return eight months old
female Beagle. "Ginger”. VI 6-7159 74tfn
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals - Sales - Service - Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators & Adding Matchines
CA^ES TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-6000
Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline,
- Sinclair Oils 29c Qt.
d RC Champion Sparkplugs....29c
Discount Auto Parts
AT JOE FAULK’S
214 N. Bryan
Sinclair Oils 29c Qt.
SOSOLIK’S
TV - RADIO - PHONO x
SERVICE
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
1 I
SPECIAL NOTICE
Itop Lak e , located
niles from College. Sould be goi
g soon. Clean picnic grounds. 76tfn
Hwy. 6 South,
Sould be
Register before 15th for
the new class starting
i 20 in Gregg Simplified
hand, Bookkeeping, Typ-
Dial TA 3-6655
McKENZIE-BALDWIN
BUSINESS COLLEGE
70tl6
Electrolux Sales and Service. G. C.
Williams. TA 3-6600. 90tfn
OFFICIAL NOTICES
f 1 p.m.
— Direc
ector of Stui
lay preceding
ident Publica-
entification cards which were made in
ection with registration of February
wi
4. for the current semester are now
idy for distribution in the EXCHANGE
ORE. They should be claimed in person
They
H. L. Heaton, Director of
Admissiojp and Registrar
TV - Radio - Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
GILS RADIO & TV
[A 2-0826 101 Highland
JIM M. PYE ’58
REPRESENTING
VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232
401 Cross St. C. S.
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
603 Old Sulphur Springs Road
TEXAS
BRYAN,
Sm ISJWGS
FOLGER S COFFEE » 59
FEATHER CREST EGGS ^Med 149
PILLSBURY FLOUR 5 * bag 39
PEPSi or COKES 12 Bottles Plus Deposit 45 (
WOLF BRAND CHIU no 2 can 49
WONDER RICE.
• • •
2 lb. box 25c
DUTCH TREAT Cheese. . 2 lbs. 59c
3 24 OZ. BOTTLES
WELCH’S Grape Juice .... $1.00
LIBBY’S FROZEN
ORANGE JUICE. . 5 6 oz. Cans 99c
SLICED OR HALVES
HUNT’S PEACHES. . . 2l/ 2 can 25c
BANNER OLEO 3 lbs. 49c
Kleenex Towels ... 2 rolls for 39c
Rosedale English Peas. 3 303 cans 50c
PUFFIN OR BETTY CROCKER
BISCUITS 3 cans 25c
WHOLE KERNEL
ROSEDALE CORN . 3 2 oz. cans 50c
BABY BEEF
ROUND STEAK
BABY BEEF RUMP OR
PIKES PEAK ROAST
BRAZOS VALLEY
FRYERS
FRESH JUMBO SHRIMP
lb. 75c
. lb. 75c
Whole - Lb.
29
c
lb. 79c
• • • • •
FRESH OYSTERS . . 12 oz. jar 69c
HORMEL
DAIRY BACON. . . .
. lb. 59c
WHITE POTATOES
FANCY 10 LB. BAG
40
c
FRESH JUMBO
LETTUCE.
RED RIPE ,
2 heads 25c I TOMATOES . 2 lbs. 25c
VALLEY SWEET GRAPEFRUIT OR ORANGES.
SPECIALS GOOD MARCH 2-3-4, 1961
MILLER'S
3800 TEXAS AVENUE
SUPER
MARKET
VI 6-6613
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