The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 13, 1962, Image 2

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    THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Thursday, September 13, 1962
CADET SEOUCFT
„ "" 'ss t S'
by Jin, F.arlf> CARELESSNESS CITED
BATTALION EDITORIALS
Many Significant Events
To Highlight New Year
As sure as the weather has turned hotter and long- lines
have formed at practically every business establishment in
the area, school has begun.
Any further reminders will come Monday morning when
classes will slowly kick into gear for the long pull into the
dead of Winter.
Even though the signs are the same, in many aspects
this will be a year like no other in the long, colorful and
sometimes boisterous history of A&M.
Among the more notable things to mark on your calendar
and look forward to:
® Texas’ new Maritime Academy, operated by A&M
with headquarters in Galveston, opens for the first time thw
fall. Cadets will spend their first year on campus here and
their last three at Galveston.
Subcommittee To Open
Probe Of Mail Robberf
0/ I
WASHINGTON (A 3 )—A far cry
from the usual congressional
committee report is one being
prepared by the Government Op
erations subcommittee headed by
a Texas Congressman, Rep. Jack
Brooks of Beaumont.
It will be about the recent $1.5
Many Letters
To Constituents
Prove Worthy
• A new Aggie grid era opens under the coaching of
Hank Foldberg, a former star here who made All-America at
West Point. The new mentor’s first team is being rated a
strong contender for conference honors and may put A&M
back on its winning ways in football.
• A&M’s first convocation is scheduled Nov. 16 and will
see the Board of Directors’ Century Study response. Groups
both on campus and across the state have worked for the
past year on the Centum Study report to provide college
goals for the next 15 years.
• The Corps of Cadets will operate for the first time
under the Code of Conduct, compiled during the summer to
consolidate corps privileges and practices. The college’s Honor
Code enters its second year, after an initial year considered a
success in almost every quarter.
® Sports />ther than football will also see the Aggies
standing at or near the head of the class. Heavy returnees
from strong teams will be found in baseball, track, gold and
cross country, with basketball the only question mark. Here
Coach Bob Rogers has lost heavily via graduation and will
have to rebuild.
“ . . . blue cards, green ones and a few white ones—are you
sure you hafta have a pink one, sir?”
Gonzalez Studies
Federal Agencies
• Plans may be completed during the year for the first
state-wide 4-H Horse Show. Tentative plans now call for the
inaugural show in August of next year, with entries expected
from across the state.
• A new largest building on campus will be unveiled this
fall when the multi-million dollar Plant Sciences Building
opens. The huge building is fast nearing completion and
officials are eying an October opening date.
• This will also be the last year for veterinary medicine
students to attend semester classes. Beginning next fall they
will register under a trimester system, a plan that seems to
be fast sweeping the country and could conceivably be used
here college-wide in the not-too-distant future.
• The new Research and Development Annex is entering
its first full year of use, with a highly-interesting project
now underway. Research is being conducted on an Astro-
Kinetic Lift, a type of aircraft that may eventually be used
for both military and civilian uses.
These of course are onl ythe high spots of what looks
like a very interesting year—but don’t turn your head too
slowly, something might pass you by.
Get a flying start on Continental!
WASHINGTON
NEW ORLEANS
By TEX EASLEY
Associated Press Special Service
WASHINGTON Rep.
Henry B. Gonzalez, Demo-San
Antonio, a virtual newcomer to
Washington, has under way a
campaign to make himself known
to top government officials.
Not only does he become ac
quainted with the leaders but he
has an opportunity to familiarize
himself with operations of their
offices.
Gonzalez, 46, won words of ap
preciation from Secretary of Wel
fare Abraham Ribicoff when he
visited the latter’s headquarters.
He said Gonzalez had been the
first member of the House to
visit him since he became a mem
ber of President Kennedy’s cab
inet.
Gonzalez entered the House
last November as the elected suc
cessor to former Rep. Paul Kil-
day, Demo, who resigned to be
come a member of the three-
judge Military Court of Appeals.
Starting with Secretary of
Commerce Luther H. Hodges, the
Spanish-speaking Gonzalez has
about gone through the Cabinet
and sub-cabinet ranks. When
possible, he takes along a mem
ber of his staff so he, too, can
get a better insight into what
makes the wheels of government
turn.
Gonzalez, in periodic reports to
constituents, isn’t hesitant to tell
about trips he’s invited to take
by virtue of his position. Some
members are reluctant to report
such trips for fear they may be
thought of as junketing Con
gressmen. Gonzalez, in a recent
letter to constituents, wrote:
“It came as a surprise to me
when Secretary of the Army, El
vis Stahr, invited me during the
last congressipnal recess to visit
in Germany for a wmrking in
spection trip along with six other
congressmen.
“At first I hesitated about go
ing, for it never was my desire
to be what some people call a
junketing congressman.”
He drew this conclusion from
his 10-day trip:
“It was a revealing experience
and a working experience and I
feel I can be a better congress
man for having done it.”
Gonzalez doesn’t expect to have
much free time in the near fu
ture. He plans to have his wife
and their eight children join him
when school begins again.
Mrs. Gonzales and some of the
children, who range in age from
4 to 21, were here to see him
sworn in when the new session
convened last January. Gonzalez,
who was uncertain if he would
have an opponent in the May
primary in a bid for a full two-
year term starting next January,
had little choice but to leave his
family at home until the future
was more certain.
Going through the Democratic
primary without opposition, and
with no Republican against him
for the November balloting,
things are looking up for Gon
zalez. He’s house hunting here
WASHINGTON UPJ—Rep.
Wright Patman, Demo—Texar
kana, is a firm—and consistent—
believer in the effectiveness of
the weekly letter to constituents.
He’s been writing them regu
larly for almost 30 years. The
number of “editions” he has is
sued now exceeds 1,3.50.
Patman, and the many other
members of Congress who also
write the weekly letters, feel they
are helpful in keeping their po
litical fences in good order.
Patman’s formula is to com
ment on matters of interest to
his Northeast Texas constituents;
why he opposes or supports a
particular legislative proposal,
and random observations on the
national or international scene.
He also includes comments like
this:
“One American farmer is
equivalent to five Russians
(based on 9 per cent of our pop
ulation engaged in farming, 45
per cent in Russia)” or “The
new measles vaccine is 90 per
cent effective.”
Sound Off
Editor,
The Battalion:
Please do not send us any'more
issues of your newspaper. They
cluttered my yard fo.r over a year
and since we have now moved we
certainly do not intend to pay
seven cents postage on something
we do not read and never even
subscribed to in the first place!
It would save us us both money
if you would just keep your
newspaper and read it yourself.
Mrs. Bryon Bostick
Eddy, Tex.
CHICAGO
NEW YORK
REGISTER BETWEEN 1st and 15th
for DAY or NIGHT classes
STARTING SEPTEMBER 24
Our superior training can alter your
future—within months. Dial TA 3-6655
McKinzie-Baldwin Business College
702 South Washington Avenue
Bryan, Texas
Test flight of a helicopter equip
ped with an all-glass-fibre rotor
blade has been made. The new
blade appears to be more durable
than the metal type.
GARZA’S
Restaurant
GENUINE
MEXICAN & AMERICAN
FOODS
803 S. Main
Bryan
Coo-rcnicat connections at D&9aa and Howtos with £m»
4-engine non-stops east. For reservations, your TtstsI
Agent or Continental at VI 6-476SL
CONTIN&MTAL AIRLINES
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu
dent writers only. The Battalion is a now-tax-supported, non
profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and op
erated by students as a college and community neivspaper
and is under the supervision of the director of Student
Publications at Texas AnM College.
Members of the Student Publications Board are Allen Schrader, School of Arts and
Orr, School of Engineering; Dr. Murray Brown, School of Agri
culture ; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, School of Veterinary Medicine.
Sciences; J. A.
Battalion.
don, T
kor throug
Fhe
Taj
student newsp
paper at Texas A.AM.
daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and
May. and once a week during summer school
is published in College
ind holiday periods Set
St*
.epten
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all new.
credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news
me Associated rreea
dispatches credited to it
spontaneous origin published herein.
In are also reserved.
me
Bights of republication of all other matter har*
Second-class postage paid
at College Station, Texas.
MEMBER i
'’he Associated Pres
Texas Press Assn
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
Services, Inc., New YorV
City. Chicago, Los An
geles and San Francisco
Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester : $6 per school year, $6.50 per full year
ite fu
All subscriptions subject to 2°fc
Battalion.
Address: The
Room 4,
sales tax. Ad vert is in
YMCA Building
Ing rate furnished on request
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 6-6415.
ALAN PAYNE EDITOR
Ronnie Bookman Managing Editor
Van Conner Sports Editor
Dan Louis, Geri’y Brown, Ronnie Fann News Editors
REMEMBER ^YOU AGGIES
IF WE BOUGHT YOUR BOOKS IN JUNE WE’D LIKE
FOR YOU TO BUY OUR BOOKS NOW.
THIS WILL ALLOW US TO CONTINUE TO GUARAN
TEE YOU A MARKET FOR BOOKS PURCHASED FROM
US.
LOU’S RIGHT WITH YOU
BE RIGHT TOO!
million mail truck robbery in
Massachusetts.
“We’ll get it out as soon as
possible,” said Brooks. “But
right new we’re tied up with the
economy in government agencies
hearings. Meanwhile, we have
been assured by the Post Office
Department that additional se
curity measures, such as radio
controls, are being established to
prevent a recurrence of this type
robbery.”
Brooks’ group was in the midst
of a series of hearings, in which
cabinet members were being
called in to discuss how they
could cut down on the cost of
their departments, when the
Massachusetts robbery took
place.
Because his subcommittee is
supposed to check up on the effi
ciency or lack of efficiency of
departments, the routine economy
probe was temporarily set aside.
The two men who wei*e held up,
the mail truck driver and his
helper, came down from Boston
to testify.
Although the report and its
recommendations are yet to be
published, Brooks, in closing the
hearing, raised the question as to
why a million dollars or more
would be hauled about the coun
tryside in a regular mail truck.
It developed that money is being
transported in similar fashion by
mail trucks in many other places.
The report also may reflect
the annoyance of Brooks and his
colleagues at postal officials
from headquarters here who tes
tified about the Boston situation
but failed to volunteer the in
formation that money in a mail
bag being transported by mail
truck from Chicago to another
'
c - We
S; t4i6
‘Sports Car Center”
Dealers for
Renan !t-Peu geo*
&
British Motor Car*
Sales—Parts—Service
Service All Foreign Cars' *j
Texas Ave. TA 2-46173
Illinois city had been slo'l
When the bag readiedijl
tinafion and was opened
Brooks, a bundle of ddj
had replaced some $58,®))!
rency. The department,;,
ter, am ouneed the. IjlieP
inside job.
THURSDA
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..AN AMAZIIWSACHIEVM
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“WHERE AGGIES MEET*
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Visit Our Air Conditioned In-Door Theatre & Snack i
TONIGHT ISt Show 7:00 p.m
2 Color Hits
Deborah Kerr
In &
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James Stewart
In
Naked Spur'
FRESHMEN
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Don’t Forget Frida-
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