THE BATTALION " - Thursday, November 8, 1962 College Station, Texa,s Page 5 Corps Trip Activities Center In Dalia s, Denton Festivities Begin Tomorrow Night On TWU Campus j^pownowAi mm 4 hLotts-Axmo^x nv siw »nm 4- BLOCKS -AKARP DALLAS MEMORIAL AUDiTOPlU PLOO* PALLAB MEMOR/AL AODTOIflOM Pt-Odl? Activities slated for the coming Corps Trip Weekend are as follows: ® Yell practice in front of Hubbard Hall, TWU campus, Friday 7 n. m. ® Open House at all TWU dormitories, Friday 8 p. m. ® Senior reception, Mary Gibbs Jones Hall, TWU cam pus, Friday 8 p. m. ® Semi-formal dance in Student Union Building, TWU campus, Friday 9 p. m. © Parade by Corps of Ca dets, downtown Dallas, Sat urday, 8:30 a. m. © Free barbecue. State Fair Grounds, Saturday 11 a. m. - 2 p. m. ® Aggie - SMU football game. Cotton Bowl, Saturday 2 p, m. © Dance, Dallas Municipal Auditorium, Saturday 9 p. m.- 2 a. m. © Mid - semester grades, A&M campus, Monday '8 a. m. : Ki —"-"rr !•'"'! j Bitter Nixon Bids Public Life Farewell BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — An embittered Richard M. Nixon, his hopes for a political come back in ruins, congratulated Gov. Edmund G. Brown on Wednesday, bade farewell to public life, and in an angry denunciation of the press, told newsmen: “You won’t have Nixon to kick Around any longer. Because this, gentlemen, is my last press con ference.” The 49-year-old Republican for mer vice president, eyes swollen from lack of sleep and flashing anger, accused the press of dis torting his statements. In one breath, he said he had no complaints. Then he aired a few. “Thank God for radio and TV,” Nixon said through tightly com pressed lips, “for keeping the newspapers a little more honest.” LEVELING HIS gaze at assem bled reporters, he said: “Never in my 16 years of campaigning have I complained about coverage to a publisher or an editor. I believe a reporter has a right to cover the news as he sees it. But I’ll say to a reporter sometimes: T wish you had given my opponent the same going over you gave me.” Later he told netvsmen: “For 16 years, ever since the Hiss case, you’ve had a lot of fun. You’ve had an opportunity to at tack me. I’ve given as good as I’ve taken — and I’ve had fun matching wits with you.” THE DEFEAT was the most shattering of Nixon’s career. He never before had been beaten in six California elections, starting when he ran for Congress in 1946. He was re-elected in 1948, won a seat in the U. S. Senate in 1950, was nominated for vice president, at age 39, in 1952 and won election on the Republican ticket with Dwight D. Eisenhower. He was re-elected vice president in 1956 and lost to John F. Kennedy by 110,000 votes, in the 1960 presi dential election. And now it was over — the man who “talked back to Soviet Pre mier Khruschev” and “was stoned by Communists in South Amer ica,” to quote some of his cam paign phrases had lost to a gover nor who was hardly known outside California before winning the of fice in 1958. His face grimly drawn, his voice husky. Nixon appeared ■uwl PLACE YOUR ORDERS NOW for the 1962 - 1963 TEXAS A&M COLLEGE RECTORY of Offices — Staff — Students Price $1.00 At The Student Publications Office Y M C A Bldg. Humble Scientist To Lecture Here A Humble Oil & Refining Co. research scientist will speak on campus Thursday. Dr. J. L. Franklin, research as sociate for Humble’s Research and Development Division at Baytown, will discuss “Chemistry of the Rare Gas Ions” at a meeting of the dead serious and exerting intense efforts to keep his rancor from getting out of hand. In congratulating Gov. Brown, Nixon said: “He has the greatest honor and responsibility of any governor in the United States. A&M-Baylor Section, American Chemical Society. The meeting will begin at 7:45 p.m. in Room 231 of the Chemis try Building. Franklin holds BS and MS de grees in chemical engineering from the University of Texas and earned a PhD in physical chemistry there in 1934. He joined the Humble Co.’s laboratories in Bay- town that year. His special fields of interest are thermodynamics, reaction kinetics and electron impact phenomena, v Spts fillers Texas sells the lowest-priced fishing license in the U. S. The universal license, which costs .$2.15, may be used by either resident or non-resident fishermen . $1,000 Loan Pot For TMA Cadets Established Here Members of the Texas maritime industry have contributed $1,000 for student loans available to Tex as Maritime Academy cadets. TMA Superintendent Bennett M. Dodson said the first $1,000 loan fund was set up by individual con tributions from members of Pro peller Clubs in Port Arthur, Beau mont, Orange, Galveston, Browns ville, Houston and Corpus Christi. The Texas Maritime Academy, which opened this semester as part of A&M, has 21 cadets in its first class. Accepting the contributions for the academy students was Rear Admiral Sherman B. Wetmore, USNR (Ret.), chairman of the TMA’s Board of Visitors. BATTALION CLASSIFIED HELP WANTED Students who are interested in assisting in physics laboratories may contact the department secretary in Room 237 of Physics Bldg. 24tfn WANT AD RATES One day 3* per word 2e per word each additional day Minimum charges—40^ DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 30^ per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT Furnished studio apartment for one st dent, nice quiet location, $35.00 utiliti • J V. T - paid. I 6-8057 29t2 8656. Roomy attractive two bedroom unfur nished apartment, 413 Sulphur Springs Road, Bryan. Call VI 6-6660. 23tfn TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 AGGIES NOTICE To Rent Brazos County A&M Club For Mixed Parties,—See Joe Faulk SAE 30 Motor Oils 15£ Qt. Major Brands Oils 27-3l£ Qt. For your parts and accessories AT a DISCOUNT See us— Plenty free parking opposite the courthouse. 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