The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 18, 1962, Image 2

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THE BATTALIOtN
Page 2 College Station, Texas Friday, May 18, 1962
CADET SLOUCH
MOVIE
go
ROUND 1
Palace
Through Tuesday — ★★★★★
“The Children’s Hour.”
Church News
A&M Church of Christ
Sunday — Radio sermon,
WTAW, 8 a.m.; Bible classes,
9:45 a.m.; morning worship,
“God Sent His Servants and His
Son,” 10:45 a.m.; young people’s
classes, 6:15 p.m.; Aggie class,
6:30 p.m.; evening worship, 7:15
p.m.
Wednesday — Ladies’ Bible
class, 9:30 a.m.; mid-week serv
ice, 7:15 p.m.
A&M Presbyterian Church
Sunday — Aggie welcome cof
fee, 9:30 a.m.; Church school,
9:45 a.m.; morning worship,
“The General Assembly,” 11
a.m.; leagues, 5 p.m.
Wednesday — Chancel choir
rehearsal, 7 p.m.
Campus
Through Saturday — ★★“Ride
the High Country.”
Saturday night preview —“Not
Tonight, Henry”—unreviewed.
Circle
Saturday — ★★★ “Strangers
When We Meet” and ★★ “Tall
Men” and ★★★ “Rachel and the
Stranger.”
Sunday thru Tuesday— ★★
“Bachelor Flat” and “Blood and
Roses”—unreviewed.
Skyway
Through Wednesday — ★★★
“The Horizontal Lieutenant” and
★ ★ “Cimmaron”
Gtiion
Sunday only — ★★★★ “Poc
ketful of Miracles”
T. Nickell
★ ★★★★ Exceptional
★ ★★★ Excellent ,
★ ★★ Good
★ ★ Fair
★ Poor
by Jim EarU £] S t e s,
nn 9
lime
McSpadden Given
To Salvage Records
AUSTIN UP) — State Agri
culture Commissioner John C.
White said Thursday he has
granted time for receivers for
Billie Sol Estes and Coleman
McSpadden to prepare briefs
seeking to salvage the pair’s
grain operations.
“They asked for a few hours
to prepare briefs,” White said of
Harry Moore, Estes’ receiver,
and Roy Bass of Lubbock, re
ceiver for McSpadden. Both
Estes and McSpadden are under
federal fraud indictments.
White refused to. reinstate li
censes of two Estes grain ware
houses Wednesday and ordered
Moore and Bass to “discontinue
all storage operations.”
Moore applied for reinstate
ment of the licenses after White
revoked them permanently be
cause Estes is insolvent.
“ . .. what else could it be but a beard?”
Bulletin Board EVEN LIVING COS IS
Hometown Clubs
Lamar club will meet Friday
at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3-C of the
* Memorial Student Center.
Wives Clubs
Animal Husbandry club will
hold its annual awards steak fry
Friday at Hensel Park.
Magazine Writer Urges
Pay For College Students
....White said it will take “some
mighty involved legal maneu
vers” to prove Estes and Mc
Spadden are solvent and eligible
for grain storage licenses. ......
The warehouses are United
Elevators, Lamesa; South Plains
Grain, Inc., Levelland, both
Estes’; and McSpadden’s Associ
ated Growers of Wildorado at
Westwar; Associated Growers of
Wildorado at Wildorado; and
McSpadden Grain Co., Lubbock.
He estimated they hold a total
of 4.7 million bushels.
White noted at a press con
ference Wednesday that Estes’
first grain storage contracts and
Library Is Seeking
Ideas Of Faculty
Suggestions for facilities and
service which might be considered
in planning a major addition to
Cushing Library are being sought
from the A&M faculty.
In the proposal stage is a large
addition to be constructed to the
rear of the present building, ex
tending all of the way to the
Texas Engineers Library.
“This is your Library, and
every effort is being made to plan
a building that will serve your
needs and those of your students
in the finest way possible,” a state
ment issued by the Faculty Lib
rary Committee says, in part. Any
suggestions concerning the Library
program as a whole also are
sought. All suggestions should be
in writing.
COLLEGE MASTER
VI 6-4988
“Sports Car Center”
Dealers for
Renault-Peugeot
&
British Motor Cara
Sales—Parts—Service
■“We Service All Foreign Cars”;
;i416 Texas Ave. TA 2-4617;
■
Mmjjjutf ■■■■■■■■■ i m i ■ ■ ■ i m gj i
Special To The Battalion
NEW YORK—Dr. Margaret
Mead proposes that all college
students be paid salaries for per
forming their school work. She
said they should no longer be
financially penalized .for the
time they spend studying; time
during which their less intelli
gent, ambitious or creative con
temporaries are earning money
and gaining experience in their
chosen fields.
Writing in the June issue of
Redbook, on newsstands next
Tuesday, Miss Mead deplored the
custom of making college stu
dents “suffer now for what they
may be able to do later.”
She does not consider “free”
education sufficient, since it does
not account for the student’s liv
ing costs. She cites the fact that
one third of the young people
who are clearly college material
do not go to college, and main
tains that the reason for this is
their unwillingness to either go
on being supported by their par
ents, or to scrimp along on the
money they can earn at part time
jobs which actually interfere
with their studies.
“Higher education for as many
of our young people as possible
is not a luxury but a necessity
in a society that needs ever more
high-level skills,” she writes.
“The time has come when what
college students are doing should
be recognized as work . . . paid
for like any other work.”
As for methods of financing
college students, Miss Mead
writes:
paid. Our system is out of date,
a legacy from the past that no
longer fits any modern country.
We heed to change it.”
COLLEGE MASTER
VI6-4988
“How would we finance a pro
gram of salaries for qualified
college students? The same way
we finance other necessary serv
ices — by public funds through
taxes and by private funds from
individuals and foundations. Ed
ucation for those who are being
trained for the careers recog
nized as most directly useful to
society—doctors, teachers, nurs
es, engineers — would most logi
cally be financed out of public
funds.
“Because we are a country
with a mixed economy, where
private initiative and private
generosity supplement our tax-
supported activities, some of the
education for other kinds of ca
reers and for students who need
a longer time to think, to experi
ment, to' explore, might be pri
vately underwritten.
“But all students should be
paid for doing useful work, no
longer treated as a dependent,
overprivileged, overindulged
group-who ought to be support
ed, domineered over, made to suf
fer now for what they may be
able to do later. Nor should they
be treated as a group who must
work twice as hard in order to
pay for something for which they
should in fact themselves be
THE BATTALION
COLLEGE MASTER
VI 6-4988
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu
dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-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 news of
spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter here
in are also reserved.
Second-class postage paid
at College Station, Texas.
MEMBER i
The Associated PreM
Texas Press Assn.
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., New York
City, Chicago, Los An
geles and San Francisco.
Mail subscriptions are 13.60 per semester; (6 per school year, $6.60 par full year.
All subscriptions subject to 2% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on renuest.
Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building. College Station, Texas.
News contributions 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.
College Students
For Summer Work
International firm to hire 30 stu
dents for summer months—June
- July - August to assist man
ager of New Products Division-
Must be free to travel in
Texas — Have drivers license.
Must be personable with pleas
ant speaking voice.
OVER AND ABOVE WEEKLY
PAY CHECKS: COMPETE
WITH FELLOW STUDENTS
FOR:
(A) $2,000 Cash Scholarship
(B) Additional $1,000 Cash
Scholarships Awarded
Weekly.
(C) To win one of many jet
plane trips around the world
(D) To win one of the Austin-
Healy sportcars.
ALAN PAYNE EDITOR
Ronnie Bookman Managing Editor
Van Conner - Sports Editor
Gerry Brown, Ronnie Fann, Dan Louis Jr - News Editors
Jim Butler, Adrian Adair Assistant Sports Editors
Sylvia Ann Bookman Society Editor
Johnny Herrin, Ben Wolfe Photographers
Kent Johnston, Tom Harrover, Bruce Shulter Staff Writers
Win One Or All
Write immediately for appoint
ment: Personnel Director. Suite
929 Bankers Mortgage Bldg. 708
Main Street, Houston, Tex. or
Call CA 8-9804 for Personal
Appt: Interviewing Saturdays
10: a. m. and Sunday 11:00 a. m.
the greatest growth of his grain
operations occurred “during the
Republican administration when
Walter C. Berger was president
of the Commodity Credit Cor
poration.
“I don’t know if he (Berger)
personally arranged for Estes’
start in storing gfli
grain,” White said Tbfl
Berger is now a director off
mercial Solvents Corp.,
supplier of anhydrous
fertilizer. Commercial
was assignee for the incomef)
Estes’ grain warehouses.
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No look-alikes here! You’ve got three decidedly different
kinds of cars to choose from—each with its own size and
sizzle. The Jet-smooth Chevrolet’s specialty is luxury—
just about everything you’d expect from an expensive car,
except the expense. ■ If you’re thinking a bit thriftier,
there’s the Chevy II with practicality to do you proud.
Lots of liveliness, too, for such a low, low price. ■ Got
a sporty gleam in your eye? Step right up to our Corvair
for rear-engine scamper and steering that’s doggone near
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for the most versatile choice going and a
beauty of a buy on your favorite.
Beautiful Buying Days are here at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's
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By Charles M. Sch^
THf£ \eSBR[Q0^m CAN
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