Page 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, April 20, 1961 THE BATTALION Two Americans Believed Assassinated By Cubans By The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The United States Wednesday accused the Castro regime of 'executing two Americans in Cuba without fair trials, violating justice as prac ticed by civilized nations around the world. The State Department sent off a protest to pro-Communist Prime Minister Fidel Castro, but there was doubt the U. S. note would reach Havana. The department said diplomatic channels with Cuba had been blocked by a “communications blackout.” The State Department also asked about the safety of some 1,200 other U. S. citizens in Cuba. It has had no word through official channels since the Cuban fighting began last weekend. Some Ameri cans in Havana, including news men, unofficially were reported under arrest. Information available to the Inter-American Press Association in New York indicated that the Americans under arrest in Havana were confined to the Sports Palace there. The two Americans executed Wednesday, according to an an nouncement on the Cuban govern ment radio, were Angus McNair, Jr., of Miami, Fla., and Hov/ard Anderson of Yakima, Wash. Both had been under arrest on charges of anti-Castro activity for some time prior to the outbreak of fighting. State Department press officer Lincoln White said: “As far as we know, these executions have taken place perhaps without a trial, and we are asking the Swiss government to give us reports on what is taking place.” Since the United States broke off diplomatic ties with the Castro regime last January, the Swiss Embassy in Havana had handled U. S. interests in Cuba. The Swiss government reported it has been unable to contact its BATTALION CLASSIFIED WAjNT One day AD KATES per word 24 per word each additional da -40« nnal day i inuin charge- DEADL.INE 4 p.m. day before publicatio* Classified Display 804 per column inch edch insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT Television, roll-away beds, baby beds, vacuum cleaners, refrigerators, ranges, air conditioners, belt vibratur, for rent by week or month. Call Kraft Furniture Co., lOOto Bryan, TA 2-5019. 405% North Main, you will find a two bedroom home, newly furnished with ga- month. Ask at Corbett’s age, $55.00 Alterations Shop or call VI 6-6692 after 5 or Saturday afternoon and Sunday lOOtfn Two bedroom furnished house, large yard, attic fan, $50.00 a month. TA 2-7869. 99tfn Three bedroom house, 908 Fairview, bath, lak floors, $41.00, VI 6-7334. 94t8 Unfurnished two 520 wiring, attic fan, pan Crockett School. Phone ^ p. m. two bedroom apartment, an, panel ray hi Phone VI 6-6660 after eat, near 61tfn A one and two bedroom modem fur nished apartment. Air conditioner if de sired. Call after 4 p. m., TA 2-3627. 1300 Antone Street. 68tfn HELP WANTED A well established firm in Bryan nei three men to train as salesmen. Experiei not necessary, but applicati fidential. has advantages Write P. O. Box 352 ank. Applications kept 100t3 Waitress wanted. Must be over 18 years old. Experience not necessary. Apply at 3606 South College Ave. TA 2-1352. 94tfn WORK WANTED hour. Ca VI 6-4005. Call Mrs. Gregory, week, 502 Boyett. 120tfn Our nursery fhr children all wp and deliver. VI 6-8151. No foack. i. Picl ver cab 42tfr. sei ing, m 8408 T. egati’ exas ers, offs es and metal plate We. VI 6-5786. made. 87tfn LOST Lost from Hospital lounge, prescript ’ tsgpy Hospital of ascription sun glasses. Please return to Campus Security Office. 99t3 mge, a pa Please retu FOR SALE OR RENT For immediate occu bedroom home within walking college. See at 507 Dogwood o 6315. pance, nice three valking distance of call VI 6- FOR SALE 1955 Chevrolet, R & H, White tires, W. W., 6 cyl., Std. Trans., very clean, mechanically good. Only $495. VI 6- 5409. 100t2 Used automatic washing machine in good condition. Guaranteed. $45.00. VI 6- 4189. 100t2 Two adjoining lots, each 80 by 145, corner Timber and Anna, College. Call VI 6-5694 noon or evening. lOOtfn 1952 Plymouth sedan, 4 door, 6 radio and heater, good mechanical condi- eyl., tion, $210.00, . Contact Walter Bernis after C-19-B College View, or call 5 p. m. at Vi 6-6218 during work hours. Rubber base paint, ideal for all interior Special $3.17 per walls. man’s Paint Store, ne: downtown Bryan. 1 gallon now. Chap- :xt to Post Office, 98t4 OFFICIAL NOTICES Official tel mailed or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office of Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding publication — Director of Student Publica tions. Arts and Sciences and General Curriculum students who are on scholastic probation iminded that they should arrange a fey conference with the Dean of Arts and Sciences after the mid-semester grade re ports are received. 98t4 Ph.D. LANGUAGE EXAMINATION Examinations for meeting the. foreign language requirement for the Ph.D. degree will be given Wednesday, May 3rd at 8:00 a. m. and 1:00 Academic Build! m. in Room 129, Students wishing to cademic muilUing. Students wi; take this examination should leave the hich they wish to be material Secretary in the Depart- .anguages m. Monday, May 1st. men of Modern Languages not J. J. Woolket, he Uepar later tha 5:00 J- Head, Department of Modern Langui age I4tl SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300, A.F. & A.M. Called meeting Thursday, April 20 at 6 p. m. Two Master Mason’s Degrees will be conferred. C. W. Trossen, WM Joa Woolket, Sec. lOOtl South, od tfn Electrolax Sales and Service. Williams. TA 3-6600. G. C. 90tfn ■use the | Havana mission since the fighting began. Anderson had been in the service station business in Havana for years. McNair was accused by the Castro government of a sneak landing in Cuba last month with a Cuban group intending to fight Castro. Cubans with him were also executed. News dispatches from Guantan amo Bay, the big U. S. Naval Base in eastern Cuba, said Havana sources had advised that Associ ated Press correspondent Robert Berrellez and United Press Inter national reporter Henry Raymont had been under arrest since Mon day. Pease Corps Offers Draft Deferment • 24 Hour Wrecker Service • Whitley’s Auto Parts WE BUY BURNED & WRECKED CARS & TRUCKS 3 Miles West of Conrthouse on Highway 21 BRYAN, TEXAS H. L. WHITLEY, JR., OWNER v Phone TA 2-6840 TV - Radio - Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 2403 S. College JIM M. PYE ’58 REPRESENTING Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232 401 Cross St. C. S. Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline, Sinclair Oils 29c Qt. RC Champion Sparkplugs....29c Discount Auto Parts AT JOE FAULK’S 214 N. Bryan SAE 30 Motor Oil 18c Qt. HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 TYPEWRITERS Rentals - Sales - Service - Termi Distributors For: Royal arid Victor Calculators & Adding Matchine* CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS •- PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 603 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN. TEXAS' SOSOLIK’S TV - RADIO - PHONO SERVICE 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 i // r J’ fi . Where the Art of i olcircl 5 Cafeteria Cooking is not Lost Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOTS Volunteers in the Peace Corps will be eligible for deferment from military service under the present Universal Military Training and Service Act. “The relationship of the Selec tive Service System with regis trants who become members of the Peace Corps can be handled admin istratively,” said Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, Director of Selective Service. ~ : “Classification of registrants in the Peace Corps can be handled as any other registrant engaged in activities in the national health, safety or interest.” Volunteers returning home could qualify also for further deferment depending on their age, physical condition, the regulations which apply when they are released and whether or not they engage in any activities which permit them to be deferred in the national health, safety or interest. H. G. Johnson Named Local FAA Specialist The Federal Aviation Agency announced today the appointment of Hubert G. Johnson as an elec tronic specialist. Johnson, former ly of Austin, has been assigned to the Bryan-College Station area. Describing Johnson’s duties, Frank Kemmer, Chief, Airways Technical Field Office, said today, “In his new work Johnson will help install and maintain a part of the intricate network of elec tronic aid aids that make up the federal airways. Because of the critical nature of his assignment in keeping equipment constantly performing at peak efficiency, Johnson is highly qualified in many technical fields.” Johnson as an electronit special ist is now one of the many highly trained FAA employees in the Uni ted States. This experienced team of career specialists, along with the giant web of electronic aid aids, makes up the more than 158,000 miles of safe air highways that are used by both military and civil aircraft. In announcing the new appoint ment, FAA Regin II Manager Ar chie W. League said today at his headquarters in Ft. Worth, “John son has joined the new agency created by the Congress in 1958. The Federal Aviation Agency, in addition fo encouraging and fos tering the development of civil avi ation, has the task of moderniz ing the federal airways, directing air traffic control of both civil and military aircraft, allocating the diminishing airspace and both is suing and enforcing air safety rules.” Johnson lives at 106 Redmond Drive, College Station, with his wife Varika, daughter Lina Jean, and son Dale. OVER 350 EXPECTED Chase National Bank Exec To Keynote Accounting Meet William F. Butler, vice president of the Chase National Bank in New York, will address more than 350 outstanding businessmen throughout the United States, at the 14th annual Accounting Con ference to be held here April 24- 25. The New York banker will dis cuss “Current Economic Prob lems” at the banquet session Mon day, April 24 at 7 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. Robert Zech, of Arthur Andersen and Co. in Dallas, will preside. He is conference chair man. Dr. Frank W. R. Hubert, dean of the School of Arts and Sciences, will give the welcome address, with J. Gordon Peterson, director of personnel at Texas Aluminum Co. in Rockwall, giving the invoca tion. The opening session will in clude an address by Adolph G. Sch- losstein of Price, Waterhouse and Co. of Dallas, and a discus sion on “Operations Research for Smaller Companies,” by Dr. David B. Hertz, of Arthur Anderson and Co. in Dallas. Russell Kyse Peat, of Marwick, Mitchell and Co. in San Antonio, will preside. Frank Langston, financial edi tor of The Dallas Times Herald, will discuss “Financial Reporting” at the afternoon: session, with Joseph Dranguert, of Haskins and Sells in Dallas, in the chair. “Professional Accounting and Auditing Developments” has been chosen by Leo Herbert, director of the Office of Staff Manage ment at USGAO in Washington, for his talk with T. A. Hoffman, national vice president Federal Government Accountants Associa tion in San Antonio, presiding. A panel workshop discussion will be held in the afternoon, with Langston in the chair assisted by Thomas N. Jenness, Jr., of Mc- Cammon, Morris, Pickens & May- hew in Ft. Worth, and Dranguet, and Herbert. Herbert will lead another panel, assisted by Arch Rounsaville, of the internal audit division of CCA in the United States Department of Agriculture, and Wendell F Barnhart, of the Bureau of Public Roads, Region Six, in the U. S. Department of Commerce. The Tuesday sessions include! a talk on “Accounting Principles and the Accounting Principle! Board,” by Arthur M. Cannon, vice president and treasurer of Stand ard Insurance Co. in • Portland, Ore., Stanley J. Scott, of Alford Meroney and Co. in Dallas, will preside. Allen Early, of CPA in Dallas, will be in chair for the address by George Lafferty, of Cheatham, Brady and Lafferty Co. of Hous- j ton. He will talk on “Pros and Cons of Financing State Expend itures.” Forrest Freitag, assistant con troller of the Tennessee Gas Transmission Co., will discuss “Responsibility Accounting in the Oil and Gas Indsutry.” C. W. Ad- j. ams, of Cities Service Refining Corp., in Lake Charles, La., will ? preside. ISN J. Gordon Peterson will talk on “Are You Using Your Bifocals” at the luncheon at 12:15 p.m., clos ing the conference. Benson To Chair Advisory Board Dean of Engineering, Fred J. Benson, has been named chairman of the Advisory Board of the Texas Firemen’s Training School. He will fill the vacancy created by the death of Dr. F. C. Bolton, long time hoard chairman. President Earl Rudder has announced. Bolton served as chairman of the Firemen’s Training School and the Advisory Board from 1931 until the time of his death. “Dr. Bolton was the guiding hand for all of us in the school,” II. D. Bearden, director of the En gineering Extension Service, said today. The Extension Service con ducts the FTS, held annually on campus, in cooperation with the Texas Education Agency under the auspices of the State Firemen’s and Fire Marshals Association. While Bolton was on the Advis ory Board, the Texas Firemen’s Training School grew from a fen dozen students in 1931 to more than 1,500 participating firemen and nearly 250 instructors at last year’s school. , Miller To Present Paper On Texoma Dr. C. E. Miller, assistant pro fessor of botany in the Depart ment of Biology, will present a paper at the 22nd annual meeting April 20-22 of the Association of Southeastern Biologists at the Uni versity of Kentucky. His paper will concern his re searches on aquatic fungi of Lake Texoma. : );» STORE MANAGER w WE KEEP PRICES DOWN m vYget the liows sharTT? FREE BIG BONUS STAMPS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiip FAVORITE FEATURES FOR YOUR 1 OUTDOOR COOKING THIS WEEK-END I SPECIALS GOOD APRIL 20, 21, 22 We reserve the right to limit quantities. DELICIOUS COOK OUT FAVORITES TfaanAA ARMOUR OR JASMINE ALL MEAT Hormel Loaf or Agar Spiced LUNCH MEAT Lb. 69c MARYLAND CLUB miracle whip Your Choice 12-Oz. Pkg. Coffee Salad Dressing RATH LUNCH MEAT PEPSI COLA 12-Oz. .... Ctn. 12 Btl. Ctn. 37c 49c SHOESTRING POTATOES Kobcy ^ 10c \ Tender Aged Beef WHOLE CHICKEN Parade PORK & BEANS ’g„, 3!4-Lb. Can No. 300 LEMONS FRESH LETTUCE CHEE WEEZ CREAM CHEESE ol 95c 25c 29c 2 “'°J9c 7 t;29c KOUND £ SteaK* 79c Cello Bag S.°, 32c Pkg. 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