The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 11, 1962, Image 2

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    Page 2
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Friday, May 11, 1962
\ MOV IE
go
ROUND
Palace
Through Saturday—★★★
“Mooai Pilot” Walt Disney and
company has concocted this little
romance between an antronaut
(Tom Tryon) and a fetching girl
from outer space (Dany Saval).
Brian Keith portrays the bull—
'“officer,” to non-regs—who dis
approves of interplanetary rela
tions.
Sunday through Tuesday—
★ ★★‘‘Satan Never Sleeps” Wil
liam Holden, a long way from
“Picnic,” portrays a priest with
a non-theologically-minded waif
(France Nuyen) on his. . .well
. . .his hands. Clifford Webb,
who stands for the best of the
reversed white collar workers,
keeps popping up at the wrong
(right?) time.
—finally and most beautifully—
in Clinton’s (Brandon de Wilde)
realization of human fallibility.
Queen
Through Sunday next—★“King
of Kings” Louella Parsons has
dubbed this one “the best relig
ious picture ever made.” She’s
probably right, but that’s hardly
a compliment.
Campus
Through Tuesday—★★★★“All
Fall Down” Playwright William
Inge has screen-played a medio
cre novel into a more than pass
able flick. Inge’s touches are
everywhere, in Harold’s (Karl
Malden) terminating compassion,
in Beri-Beri’s (Warren Beatty)
hatred of life, in Echo’s (Eva Ma
rie Saint) abortionistic death, in
Annabelle’s (Angela Lansbury)
Oedipus complex in reverse and
Skyway
Saturday—★★★“The Man
Who Shot Liberty Valance” and
★ ★★Houseboat” and ★★’’Where
the Boys Are” “Liberty Valance”
stars James Stewart as the hero,
John Wayne as the Hero, and
Vera Miles as the—you guessed
it—heroine. Everybody’s much
too brave, a la typical western
movie; but a new twist ending
nmkes a near save. “Houseboat”
contains Cary Grant, Sophia Lor
en and No Plot. “Boys Are”—
previously reviewed.
Sunday through Tuesday—
★★★“From the Terrace” adap
ted from John O’Hara's novel of
the same title, “Terrace” has a
strong young cast—Paul New
man, Joanne Woodward and Ina
Balin. A Madison Avenue prod
igy, Newman escapes Miss Wood
ward wifely hypocrisy and flees
to Miss Balin’s inexperienced but
waiting arms. It’s better, of
course, than it sounds.
Sunday through Tuesday—★★
“Lover Come Back” and ★★
“Winchester 73” In “73,” James
Stewart plays the man with the
rifle that everyone wants; none
of them, though, can elicit from
Stewart his nasal, stylized “yea-
ou, yea-ou, yea-ou.”
lifBvMrtikBiVl
“Sports Car Center”
Dealers for
Renault-Peugeot
&
British Motor Cars
Sales—Parts—Service
| “We Service All Foreign Cars”;
11416 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517;
■ ■
Guion
Sunday only—★★“The Coman-
cheros”—previously reviewed.
T. Nickell
★ ★★★★Exceptional
★★★★Excellent
★ ★★Good
★ ★Fair
★Poor
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THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu
dent writers only. The Battalion is a norir-tax-supported, non
profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op
erated by students as a journalism laboratory and 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 Allen Schrader, School of Arts and
Sciences ; Willard I. Truettner, School of Engineering ; Otto R. Kunze, School of Agri
culture ; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M. is published in College Sta
tion, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem-
ber through May, and once a week during summer school.
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 newa of
spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter her*-
in are also reserved.
Second-class postage paid
at College Station, Texas.
MEMBER*
The Assooiated Prem
Texas Press Assn.
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., New York
City, Chicago, Los An
geles and San Francisco.
Mail subscriptions are 53.60 per semester; $6 per school year, $6.60 per full year.
All subscriptions subject to 2% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request.
Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building. College Station, Texas.
News contribution# may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the
•ditorial office. Room 4, YMCA Building. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6416.
ALAN PAYNE EDITOR
Ronnie Bookman Managing Editor
Van Conner Sports Editor
Gerry Brown, Ronnie Fann, Dan Louis Jr News Editors
Kent Johnston, Tom Harrover, Bruce Shutter Staff Writers
Jim Butler, Adrian Adair Assistant Sports Editors
Sylvia Ann Bookman Society Editor
Johnny Herrin, Ben Wolfe Photographers
CADET SLOUCH
A&SIE FOLLIES
FRIDAY * SATURDAY
by Jim Earle
iiti
i i
" \ I
INTERPRETING THE NEWS
“ .. . this must be a pretty good show! They’re advertising
almost everywhere!”
Sound Off-
Circle
Saturday — ★★ “Lover Come
Back”—previously reviewed—and
“Battle Hymn”—utireviewed.
Group Endorses
‘Non-Ethnic’ Policy
Editor,
The Battalion:
We wish to state that we
heartily agree with the senti
ments that there be “elimination
of mention of ethnic affiliation
in nothing constructive can be
accomplished by the reference”
in news reporting as expressed
by the letter from the A&M
Methodist Church, which ap
peared in The Battalion April 26.
The present policy of some of
the area news media of giving
the ethnic affiliation tends to la
bel an ethnic group with the ac
tions of a particular member of
that group.
The elimination of racial or
ethnic “labels” for American cit
izens will bear witness to the
basic American belief in an equal
opportunity for every citizen, re
gardless of his skin color.
Bryan-College Station
Citizen’s Fellowship,
Myra N. Rose, Secretary
COLLEGE MASTER
VI 6-4988
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‘‘MOON PILOT”
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Doris Day
&
Rock Hudson
In
“LOVER COME BACK”
&
Rock Hudson
In
“BATTLE HYMN”
STARTS SUNDAY
James Stewart
In
“WINCHESTER 73”
Millions Of West Germam
Live In Fear Of Russians
By J. M. ROBERTS
Associated Press News Analyst
Millions of people in West Ger
many saw the Russians come into
Germany’s eastern territories in
1945, never want to see them
again, and many of them live in
a constant nagging fear, some
times aggravated into a belief,
that an Allied backdown will
eventually open the door once
more.
Vessation of Soviet “fright
flights” in the Berlin corridors,
coupled with various statements
that the talks in Geneva did
something to ease if not settle
the Berlin dispute, appears to
have revived this feeling.
There is nothing readable on
the cards to support it, nothing
in the fundamental situation to
suggest any need for it, and
nothing but denials from Allied
Brazos Included In Huge
Request For Water Funds
WASHINGTON UP) —Texans
asked Congress Thursday for
millions to finance water proj
ects.
They appeared before a House
Appropriations subcomm i 11 e e.
Most requests supported Budget
Bureau recommendations to con
tinue projects already started.
Brazos River watershed wit
nesses sought $17 million for
Proctor Reservoir on the Leon
Lights On After
Silver Taps
Editor,
The Battalion:
We would like an answer to
one question. Why were all the
street lights turned on immedi
ately after Silver Taps?
It is evident that the majority
of the students do not regard
Silver Tups with reverence, as
they once did, but this is some
thing that must come fi'om the
individual.
The point which we are trying
to make is that someone, other
than an Aggie, decided to alter
one of the few traditions which
had previously remained un
changed. We like to believe that
it remained unchanged because
enough Aggies wanted it that
way.
Why then has this tradittion
now been changed ?
Church News
A&M Presbyterian Church
Sunday—Aggie welcome cof
fee, 9:30 a.m.; Church school,
9:45 a.m.; morning worship, guest
minister Rev. Jack C. Pars^, 11
a.m.; leagues, 5 p.m.
Wednesday—Chancel choir re
hearsal, 7 p.m.
A&M Church of Christ
Sunday — Radio sermon,
WTAW, 8 a.m.; Bible school,
9:45 a.m.; morning worship, “The
Old Paths,” 10:45 a.m.; young
people’s classes, 6:15 p.m.; 6:15
p.m:; Aggie class, 6:30 a.m.;
evening worship, “The Greatest
Commandment of All,” 7:15 p.m.
Wednesday—Ladies Bible class,
9:30 a.m.; mid-week service, 7:15
p.m.
Bulletin Board
Departmental Clubs
Sociology club will hold a re
ception Sunday afternoon from
2:30-3:30 for all parents and
friends of sociology students.
Professional Societies
Beta Beta chapter of Phi
Lambda Upsilon will hold its an
nual banquet Saturday at 7 p.m.
in the Assembly Room of the
MSC. Speaker will be Dr. Dale
Leipper, head of the Department
of Oceanography and Meteorol
ogy.
Cam pus-Wide Clubs
UN club has cancelled its
scheduled meeting for Friday,
and reset the meeting for May
18.
DANCE
At Snook
Saturday, May VI
Music By
THE JOKERS
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
“HOUSEBOAT”
with Cary Grant
FRIDAY NIGHT LATE SHOW
“THE LAND UNKNOWN”
with Mahoney
“TEENAGERS FROM
OUTER SPACE”
with Love
Added Attraction Saturday
“IMITATION GENERAL’
with Glenn Ford
River and $20 million for Still-
house Hollow Dam on the Lam
pasas River. Both streams flow
into the Brazos.
The budget bureau 1ms recom
mended $4.6 million for work on
Househollow Dam.
In the Brazos watershed group,
joined by Rep. W. K. Poage and
Omar Burleson, were Frank May-
born, W. B. Pitts and H. K. Dod-
gen, all of Temple; Mayor Ted
Connell of Killeen; Mayor P. R.
Cox of Harker Heights; Bell
County Judge Raymond Thornton
and Roy Sanderford, both of Bel
ton; Jim Flynn of Waco; Dick
Harbin of Dublin and Mayor T.
D Craddock of Hamilton.
A. M. Willis Jr., of Longview
and Rep. Lindley Beckworth sup
ported a Budget Bureau recom
mendation of $95,000 for a study
of the Sabine River and tribu
taries and $75,000 for a similar
study of the Neches River and
tributaries, to detemine what im
provements would be justified.
Dale Miller, vice president of
the Louisiana-Texas Coastal Ca
nal Association, backed naviga
tion improvements for the Gnlf
Coast and to support funds for
the canal.
authorities.
Relaxation of tensions
u valid basis for fear.
The best the United States
peets to get out of all theq
discussion with the Soviets aj
Berlin is a taeit, de
mutual understanding that
ther side had better push;
situation too far. Positiveaf.
ments on new or changed;
lions has not been and ii
expected.
The Soviet Union will cog
ue to think up ways of bp
to make young Berliners ii
the wisdom of starting ot-j
tliere if they can get away.j
of trying to frighten both Is
man and foreign investmat
the city.
Whether the more danfffli
forms of harrassment will»
tinue depends upon momem-
circumstances. But the Sovg
know now they are not goitii
get the city, or get the Ahi
out of it, through physical^
sure.
The Allied position is exes
fied in the beefed up miki
posture already assumed. Fs
dent Kennedy has repeated a
overwhelming Soviet armed!}
ces trying to overrun Wesa
Europe will be stopped byatoa
bombs if no other way.
The Soviet Union hasprolk^
even as the United States b
problems Neither wants tops
the other into an irrevocable®
flict. The minute the Sun
Union becomes too much invoM
in Europe she will begin to is
influence in Asia which airfii(
is seriously threatened.
The United States has p^
lems in Asia, also, and inis
Western Hemisphere.
More than 58 million peopli
have visited the Lincoln Memoiiil
He asked the committee to up- * n Washington D. C. since its op*
prove money to start deepening 1922.
the canal channel along the 300
miles between New Orleans and
Houston. No amounts were spec
ified. ,
COLLEGE MASTB
VI6-4988
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PEANUTS
By Charles M. Schiiii
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