The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 23, 1962, Image 1

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    Che Battalion
Csdels Lose
To TCU Frogs
See Page 6
Volume 60
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1962
Number 19
S. To Sink Ships Refusing Search
Activities Of An Almost - Perfect Football Weekend
wmmmmmmBBk
& | 4i. - ^
THE COACH HUMPS IT
. . Hank Foldberg at a crisis for A&M
Navy Will Search Or Sink
-Bound Red Ships
mi
CUBAN QUARANTINE
. . offensive weapons taboo
Wire Review
By The Associated Press
WORLD NEWS ' '
I TOKYO — Red China declared
■V-dav jt fq still r^adv to re-
■Den r^trotiotlons. with India for
•pooofiii c.pttlament nf the Chine-
border conflict.
i ? ‘ 1 fl China connled its avowarl
tn nep'otiate with a de-
’»nfl for India 11 tvoews to sret ont
f whot, it called Thinese terri-
,rv - It also reaffirmed i+s re-
to vooop' ii i' , 'e the McMahon
if 0 which India considers its
ioith ern border with Communist-
f-'Hvo Tibet.
Plainer radio in a broadcast
""^itored he'-o attributed the
'"oop position to a snoVesrnan
^ Ppining’s Ministry of National
dense.
TT. P. NEWS
OXFOpp, Miss—Foriner T'Tai-
^“n. Fdwin A. Walker filed a
'’’’el sint aaainst the Associated
^■ess Monday for S2 million,
r’l’miner he was damao'ed in sto-
^'es ahont riotinsr at the Univer-
sih of Mississinni.
talker in the suit filed in La-
(^ v ette Countv Circuit Court
^ r e. asked $1 million actual
Jn d Si million mmitive damaees.
Hie stories dealt with Walker’s
rn ^e in th« uiirht of rio+injr that
Allowed the arrival of James IT.
Meredith, a Nearro, on the “Ole
^is$” campus. Sept. 30.
AAA
SITKA, Alaska — A swift skill-
®‘ rescue at sea saved 102 per-
aboard a military-chartered
•essenger airliner that ditched
Bondar in the ocean off this south-
Alaska city.
The Northwest Airlines DC7C
ith 95 passengers — including
men, women and children — came
down with propeller trouble at
n m. FST off the entrance to
Sitlca Pound.
The ditchincr was so adant that
*he piano starred afloat 22 min
utes, while those aboard calmlv
got into PR-man life rafts.
-rwAs NEW«
T.ONCVIFW. Tex. — "Fhe C-npo-o-
Founty Grand Jury returned 71
indici-ments against 17 nersnns
Monday in connection with the
slant drillino- of oil wells in the
East, Texas E’eld.
Tn a sneeial renort the p’rand
turv also made sweening recom
mendations to the legislature fop
laws desiemed to strengthen the
enforcement and snnei’vision of
the oil and gas industry.
One of the recommendations
was to establish an Oil and Gas
Control Commission which would
take over manv of the duties now
nerformed by the Texas Raih-oad
Commission.
Marine Corps Will
Give Officer Tests
A U.S. Marine Corps officer se
lection team from Houston will be
et the Memorial Student Center
Tuesday throxigb Friday seeking
anplicants for USMC officer train
ing programs.
Reserve Officer Candidate Se
lection Tests and Aviation Qualifi
cation Tests will be given to stu
dents fi'om 8 a.m.-4 p.m, in the
MSC.
The Marine Corps has four pro
grams in its ground and aviation
branches open to freshmen through
graduate students.
Russian Rockets
Trained On U. S.
WASHINGTON UP)—The United States is ready to sink
every Communist bloc ship hepded for Cuba which refused to
stop and be searched under the blockade, a defense spokes
man said.
He said this country’s blockade fleet, now beine: deployed,
will order any ship of any nation obviously bound for Cuba
ports to stop and undergo search by a boarding party if neces
sary.
A spokesman, under a barrage of ouestions, made it clear
that force would be used if necessary in any case.
IN DISCUSSING the big force of blockade ships now
steaming toward intercept position, the spokesman outlined
1 ♦the procedure this way:
O 1 J Air and sea patrol will be
smorgasbord
ens 1962
us Chest
Op
Camp
The 1962 Campus Chest Drive
will get underway with the second
annual Kick-Off Smorgasbord at
6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Ball
room of the Memorial Student Cen
ter.
“A dollar from an Aggie for an
Aggie” is the theme of the drive,
which will be conducted the week
of Oct. 29-Nov. 2. A goal of S8.000
has been set for this year’s chest,
according to Ken Stanton, chair-
wptcbiuo- vessels move toward
Cuba. Their positions will be
reported by observation
nlaries and shins. WamMos w 1 ' 11
move in to in+ercent. They will
hail the Cuban-bound ship.
If it stons, a hoarding party will
he sent aboard to look over the
manifest.
If offensive weapons or long-
x’ange missiles or strategic-type
aircraft, for instance, ai’e found,
the captain of the ship will he
told he can head for any port oth
er than Cuba. •
IF HE refuses to change his
course, “We will use force to com-
nel him.” Force also will be used
if a ship refuses to stop for search.
A PM^nse Department suokes-
man, “Are vou prepared to sink
Planning To Graduate In January?
Better File That Degree Application
Students hoping to graduate in January will not be listed
as degree candidates unless they file an application for a de
gree by Oct. 31.
“It is absolutely necessary that formal application be
made prior to the deadlines,” Luther A. Harrison, assistant
registrar said. Undergraduates should apply with the reg
istrar’s office, and graduate students should apply with that
office and also with the dean of graduate studies.
The list of degree candidates is compiled from the com
pleted applications, Harrison explained.
Sweetheart Study
Opened By Senate
mao of the student welfare com- | Soviet ships?” The spokesman re
mittee of the Student Senate, which , pjj e< j with one crisp word: “Yes.”
is in charge of the drive.
A Denfense Department spokes-
A chart will be kept up to date , man said Soviet missilemen are
in the MSC during the drive, show- j manning 1,200-mile-range rockets
in Cuba on mobile launch pads
aimed at kev American cities in
cluding Washington.
.... , , The spokesman showed report-
to the coips unit or c.\i lan oiny erg reconna j ssance photographs of
that ayerasres the most donated per, ; niob . le medi „ m „ missiles in
man. A certificate will be given to ; , . ,
* “ . ... , j place near their launchers
those corps units or civilian dorms K
HE SAID this country has no
firm information on whether nu-
ing the standing of each civilian
dorm and corps unit.
' A bronze plaque will he given
that average at least $1 per man.
“This year’s goal should be i clear warheads are there, too, hut
easy to reach,” Stanton said. “If | that it was “inconceivable” that
each Aggie will just donate $1 we
will surpass the goal.”
Today’s Thought
In taking revenge a man is
but equal to his enemy, but in
passing it over he is his superior.
— Bacon
j the missiles would be emplaced
| without accompanying warheads.
The spokesman said U. S. aerial
! reconnaissance, sharply increased
j on President Kennedy’s orders last
week, also had spotted the early
! stages of construction of longer
I range missiles which it is esti-
(See CUBA On Page 3)
Two different aspects of the se
lection of the Aggie Sweetheart
are now being studied, Student
Body President Sheldon Best re
ported Monday.
The study, by the student life
committee of the Student Senate,
comes as the result of a meeting
Saturday between A&M and Texas
Woman’s University representa
tives.
The student life committee, chair
ed by Jerry Vion, is probing a
criteria to be used at TWU to
select semifinalists and the forma
tion of a selection team of A&M
students to select finalists.
Another selection team of Aggies
selects the sweetheart from around
13 finalists.
Saturday’s meeting followed stu
dent polls at both schools that re
vealed general dissatisfaction with
the present selection method.
TWU students select their own
semifinalists, but have never had
an established criteria from A&M
to use in the selection. For the
past two years a group of Mem
orial Student Center staff mem
bers has named the finalists. Be
fore that finalists were chosen
from pictures of the semifinalists.
U. N. Hears
Stevenson
On Red China
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (A?)
—U. S. Ambassador Adlai E, Ste
venson Monday accused Commu
nist China of premeditated naked
military aggression against India
in open scorn of United Nations
principles.
Stevenson cited the India-Chi-
nese border warfare in replying
to a Soviet demand in the 109-
nation General Assembly that Na
tionalist China be ousted from the
United Nations and all 'its U.N.
representation turned over to the
Chinese Communists.
The demand came from Soviet
Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian
A. Zorin in a speech that opened
debate on the China representa
tion issue. The United States is
confident the assembly will reject
the Soviet demand by even a
greater margin that it did last
year.
Zorin made no reference to the
India-China border warfare, but
Stevenson departed from his pre
pared text to quote Indian Prime
Minister Nehru as saying in New
Delhi that his country is being
subjected to aggression by a pow
erful and unscrupulous foe.
Expedition’s Films, Talk
Begin Adventure’ Series
Owen Lee, master diver with a
couteau underwater expedition, will
be on campus Tuesday for the first
of the Great Issues’ “International
Adventure” Series.
Lee will present prize-winning
photography entitled “Exploring
featured in a book, “Treasure Div
ers of Vigo Bay.”
Lee himself has written adven
ture articles for True and Cavalier
magazines. He studied journalism
taken from depths of 1,000 feet.
He has spent thousands of hours
diving and is considered an expert
with underwater cameras.
A native of Florida, Lee grew up _
on the Mississippi River, working at the University of Missouri,
on river scows. Before his college j Prior to joining the Cousteau
Inner Space,” official color films j days were over, he had been a I expedition he sailed the Atlantic
from Capt. Jacques Cousteau’s salmon fisherman in Alaska, a life- j Ocean on a three-master schooner,
Calypso’s Oceanographic expedi- j guard, ditch-digger, lumber hand j taking time out to do free diving
tions.
and sailor.
around the many islands of the
The program, open to the pub- ; For three and a half years, he | Caribbean.
lie, will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday) was a member of the Vigo Bay
in Guion Hall. Admission is free : expedition hunting for hidden trea-
with student activity cards. j surers in Spanish waters and shoot-
Lee, the only American member! ing a documentary film of the
of the expedition, will show movies | expedition. His diving exploits were
Great Issues Committee chair
man Bob Wimbish said the “In
ternational Adventure” Series
would present several other pro
grams later in the year.