The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 24, 1961, Image 3

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    Wive* CLl> flew* I
The Civil Engineers Wives Club met last night. Mr. Gene
King gave a talk on “Purchasing Meat Wisely.”
★ ★ ★
The Chemical Engineering Wives Club met last Tuesday.
Dr. Lindsey, Head of the Chemical Engineering Department,
talked to the club about the prospects of graduates in this
department.
★ ★ ★
University Dames will meet tonight at 8:00 p. m. in the
South Solarium of the YMCA. Mrs. Young will demonstrate
hat making. All Aggie wives are invited to attend.
★ ★ ★
Mechanical Engineering Wives Club will meet in Room
109 of the Mechanical Engineering Building tonight at 7:30
p. m.
★ ★ ★
The Aggie Wives Bridge Club will meet tomorrow at
7:30 p. m. in the Memorial Student Center.
★ ★ ★
The Aggie Wives Council will sponsor a tea this Sunday
afternoon honoring the presidents of Aggie wives clubs,
wives of department heads and the sponsors of the clubs.
THE BATTALION
Tuesday, October 24, 1961
College Station, Texas ° Page 3
British Guiana Hits
US For $25 Million
“There’s Daddy”
A proud Aggie wife and a possible 1979 Corps Commander
watch for Daddy as the Corps of Cadets march through
Fort Worth Saturday morning. Hundreds of Fort Worth
residents lined the 18-block parade route as the cadets
took over the downtown streets, (photo by Johnny
Herrin)
7x35 Binoculars
Was 39.95
NOW 29.95
A&M PHOTO
North Gate
MILADY
BEAUTY SALON
Martha Bell
Apes Beaver, Aggie Wife
Appointments Only
TA 2-0252
Also Open Thursday
and Friday Evenings
1414 S. College
800 Protest
Houston Port
Training Red
HOUSTON — About 800
Houstonians turned out Monday
night for the first Houston Chap
ter meeting of the National In
dignation Convention.
They met to protest the train
ing of a Yugoslavia port official
in Houston; the training of that
country’s jet pilots in the U.S.,
and the sale of jet planes to Yugo
slavia.
“If you train your enemy you
are helping him,” Maj. H. C.
Knickerbocker Jr. of Dallas said.
"And that’s treason.”
Knickerbocker was the Air Na
tional Guard officer who first
made public the training of the
pilots at Perrin Air Force Base
in Sherman.
“You and I have had to cough
up something like $2.4 billion for
the Y'ugoslav government,” he
said.
WASHINGTON hT* — Cheddi
Jagan, British Guiana’s left-wing
prime minister, met for almost an
hour with Secretary of State Dean
Rusk Monday. Afterward he
called the meeting “very useful
and fruitful.”
Jagan told reporters that Rusk
expressed concern with economic
underdevelopment in general par
ticularly in British Guiana.
Jagan said he needed about $25
million for his $65-million five-
year plan.
Wearing a sports jacket and red
necktie, Jagan smilingly explained
he had been scheduled to meet
with Rusk for 15 minutes. “Here
I am almost an hour later,” he
said, “so you can see that it must
have been a very useful and fruit
ful discussion.”
Jagan, a Chicago-trained den
tist and an admitted Marxist, said
that was no discussion of politics.
That subject was covered in an
WE WISH YOU A
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
For Happy Holidays
Make Your Airline Reservations
TODAY
Robert HalselL Travel Service
1411 Texas Ave.
TA 2-3784
Complentary Ticket Delivery
Robert Halsell
Idaleene Faqua
TRIANGLE RESTAURANT
Lunch and Dinner Specials
Tuesday
1. Deep Fried Flounder w/Tartar Sauce
2. Chop Suey Over Chow Mein Noodles
3. Baked Meat Loaf w/CreoIe Sauce
4. Southern Fried Chicken
.75
.85
.95
.95
(served w/two vegetables, salad, hot rolls,
coffee or tea)
Wednesday
1. Deep Fried Deviled Crab w/Tartar Sauce 75
2. Grilled Pepper Steak 85
3. Roast Beef w/Brown Gravy 95
4. Baked Chicken 95
(served w/two vegetables, salad, hot rolls,
coffee or tea)
HOURS
11:00 A. M. - 8:00 P. M.
The TRIANGLE
TA 2-1352
3606 S. College
Bryan
British Teacher
Says Red Chinese
Making ‘Advances’
HONOLULU UP) — A retired
British educator returning from a
trip to Red China, says she found
the people there happy because
they have “something to do, some
thing to eat and some place to
live.”
Miss M. F. Adams said the Com
munists have made “tremendous
advances since liberation in ex
tending education to the children
of the peasants.” She said they
study languages, mathematics, so
cial studies, history, geography
and subjects much like those
taught in American classrooms.
Miss Adams, an English school
teacher for 40 years and holder of
the Order of the British Empire,
said, “I am not a Communist.
Make that very clear.”
“The professors assured me
that they have freedom of
thought,” Miss Adams said, but,
she noted they have chosen “the
Marxist-Lenin view of life.” Those
who have not accepted this view
have quit teaching, she said.
earlier 40-minute session with U.
Alexis Johnson, deputy undersec-
reary of state for political affairs.
Jagan told newsmen his coun
try would join the inter-American
system when it attains independ
ence from Great Britain. He said
he did not think participation in
the inter-American system would
interfere with membership in the
British Commonwealth.
British Guiana, under its pres
ent constitution, enjoys internal
self-rule but foreign affairs and
defense are under British juris
diction. It can apply for complete
independence in August 1963.
Quick Dessert
Company coming? You can make
a luscious quick dessert by splitting
two sponge-cake layers (from the
bakery or your freezer). Put one
of the layers together with vanilla
pudding; sandwich the other to
gether with apricot preserves
spiked, if you like, with rum or
cognac. Frost the top of both
cakes with whipped cream and
serve a wedge of each, twin style,
for each partion.
Look your best at
formal affairs
Look your best on gala occa
sions in formal clothes cleaned
to perfection by us. Your
“audience” will applaud! Try
us soon.
Campus
Cleaners
Two Architects
To Attend Mexico
International Meet
Two architectural students, Don
Vahrenkamp and Charles E. Still,
will represent A&M next week at
the Seventh International Archi
tectural Student Conference at the
University of Mexico City.
Still, a fifth-year student, and
Vahrenkamp, a fourth-year stu
dent will be A&M’s first delegates
to the world-wide conference.
Housing discussions and prob
lems will be the main topics under
discussion at the meeting.
The A&M delegates have left
campus Friday by jet airliner for
Mexico City and the conference.
Debate Club Begins Activities;
Labor Topic Sparks Meeting
The A&M Debate Club started the Birch Room of the Memorial
its annual round of speaking and
debating last night with a clash
on the subject of labor unions and
the anti-ti'ust laws. The “affirma
tive” team, composed of Charles
Grey and Robert Denney, upheld
the proposition that Labor should,
in certain cases, come under the
jurisdiction of anti-trust legisla
tion, while Nik Lundy and Richard
Heindrich upheld the labor move
ment and argiied that further con
trols are unnecessary.
Blinn College of Brenham sent
about 15 delegates to hear the de
bate, which was deemed very good
for an opening to the season. Den
ney, president of the club, wel
comed Mrs. Burgess, Debate Coach
of Blinn College and her students.
After the debate, Dr. H. E.
Hierth, coach and sponsor of the
organization, offered constructive
criticism to the participants.
The Debate Club has its first
major test of strength in the Tex
as Christian University tourna
ment scheduled foi* Nov. 3-4. The
club plans to enter a full comple
ment of teams in the tournament
and expects to do very well.
Anyone who is interested in de
bate or speech work, or anyone
who just wants to sit-in on a de
bate is invited to attend one of
the club’s meetings. The debate
club meets every Monday night in
Student Center.
GOT YOUR
BLACK GLOVES?
$2.95, $3.95, $4.95
loupots
r VI EEH INI I
Farm Bureau Chief
Hits Government
ControlOf Farmers
McALLEN, Tex. <^')—The pres
ident of the American Farm Bu
reau hit at what he called “gov
ernment intei'ference” in agricul
ture in an address Monday night.
“After 30 years of government
meddling in agriculture, it’s time
we realized the only thing federal
givernment interference with pric
es can do is to make things worse,”
Charles D. Shuman said.
Shuman, of Sullivan, 111., ad
dressed a meeting sponsored by
the valley farm bureau, Mercedes,
Tex.
“The government route involves
strict production controls and price
fixing devices. This is the main
reason we have surpluses and in
come troubles in agriculture to
day,” he said.
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Winners (one man and
one woman student) will
receive a check for $400
on Dec. 15th and $100 a
month beginning in Jan
uary and ending in May.
25 SECOND PRIZES
of a new Philco
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