The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 13, 1963, Image 2

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    Page 2
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 13, 1963
CADET SLOUCH
swc
Campus
Newsmakers
More Picketing
At Texas U.
Picketing demonstrations are
on the move again in Austin with
Texas University students de
monstrating in support of an
ordinance making it illegal to
refuse service to a person because
of race or color.
Some 75 demonstrators gather
ed Saturday in front of two down
town Austin theaters in a three-
hour march. Among campus areas
picketed this year are women’s
dormitories and the Forty Acres
Club.
Baptist Leader
Gives To Baylor
Dr. J. M. Dawson, Baptist lead
er for separation of church and
state, formally presented his per
sonal collection of writings to
Baylor University. The materials
in the collection will be used in
Baylor’s church and state pro
gram which was started in 1957
and named in honor of Dawson.
Tech’s Problem
Is Communications
Lack of communications was
slated as the greatest problem
facing campus organizations at
Texas Tech in a recent Board
of Student Organizations retreat.
Ideas presented at the meetings
indicated that students have no
way of communicating with ad
ministrative officials and offi
cials do not communicate with the
student body.
One student’s comment was, |-
“The Toreador (Tech’s campus I
newspaper) is contributing to this
lack of communication in that it ^
does not serve the needs of the
organizations on campus.” Others
said the lack of communication is
largely due to apathy on the part
of the student body.
by Jim Earle Improvement In Red Camp
May Hurt Western Nations
“ . . . and with spring coming on, I figured I needed to re
place my 2}4-gaIlon wastecan with a 5-gallon job!”
WASHINGTON (TP) _ Any
improvement in relations .between
the Soviet Union and Red China
will almost certainly lead to a
hardening of Soviet policies to
ward the United States and other
Western nations.
Reports from Moscow and Pe
king that leaders of the two big
Communist powers are moving
toward a reconciliation are get
ting close attention in high offi
cial quarters.
Washington authorities are ex
tremely skeptical about the Reds’
chances for eliminating the split
which for several years now has
increasingly divided and weak
ened the Communist camp.
But officials say that Soviet
Premier Khrushchev and Chinese
leader Mao Tze-tung undoubtedly
are under a number of pressures
to try to bridge the gap. Fore
most among these compulsions to
unity, it is believed here, may be
a desire to take advantage of the
present rift within the West.
Khrushchev’s policies toward
the West, which seemed to be re
markably conciliatory in the
weekends immediately after the
Cuban crisis, have been returning
to more familiar and most hostile
patterns recently.
rWTTTWTTTTTTTFl
i h a 114 liun
‘Sports Car Center”
Dealers for
Renault-Peugeot
&
British Motor Cars
Sales—Parts—Service
I“We Service All Foreign Caii
11422 Texas Ave. TA 2-fl
*■ ■■■■■■■
s HwiiaaHaamn
BEHIND DEFENSE OF STALIN
A' Smoke Screen Was Hiddeit
Parking Fees
Levied At TCU
The TCU trustees have auth
orized the levying of a fee for
parking on the campus. Instead
of banning cars owned by groups,
such as the freshman class, as is
done on some campuses, they sug
gested a “zoning plan” and an
annual charge for parking permit
of up to $10 a car a year.
By WILLIAM RYAN
AP Special Correspondent
The long shadow of the Chinese
Communist party may have
played an important role in Pre
mier Khrushchev’s startling de
fense of Stalin. The Soviet lead
er’s latest speech could reflect an
attempt to heal a painful split in
the world Communist movement.
SMU Opposes
Censorship Bill
SMU’s Student Senate leaders
mailed copies of their resolution
opposing a proposed censorship-
of-foreign-films bill and proposed
amendment to members of the
Texas House of representatives.
The group is in opposition to the
bill because of what it considers
unreasonable rules regarding cen
sorship of motion pictures.
★ ★ ★
SMU’s $500,000 Sustentation
Fund Drive, the largest in the
Ostensibly, Khrushchev’s aim
was to read the riot act to art
ists and writers for being too en
thusiastic in denouncing Stalin.
Actually, Kremlin events at the
end of last week hint that the
Soviet party was laying down
a smokescreen to cover a tighten
ing up all along the line, not only
in the Soviet Union but in the
world movement.
The Friday meeting at which
Khrushchev lectured party lead
ers, writers and artists was pre
ceded by a Thursday meeting at
tended by the top brass of the
Soviet party. The unannounced
reasons and results of that Thurs
day session would be far more
interesting than what was made
public.
Khrushchev triggered de-Stalin-
ization himself with his secret
1956 speech to the 20th Soviet
party congress: In doing so, he
created two worries for himself.
First, the relaxations which set
in contributed to growing west
ernization in the ideas of the
Soviet younger generation.
Second, de-Stalinization became
one of the major causes behind
the Soviet-Chinese battle. The Red
Chinese never agreed with Khru
shchev. They resented his so-
called liberalization of commu
nism.
Khrushchev has agreed. From
now on, he announces, such non
sense must stop. He warns that
any notion of peace between ide
ologies will be “backsliding into
positions of anti-communism.”
Job Calls
^ the largest
history of the university, exceed
ed its 1962-63 goal with a total
of $507,000. Some 1,250 volun
teer workers labored through 16
campaign divisions to secure the
goal, which provides about five
per cent of the operating budget
for the school. The goal repre
sents about one-third of the 15
per cent of private gifts that
must be raised yearly to meet
operating costs of SMU.
Thursday
Jones & LaughJin Supply Co.
— Agricultural economics, busi
ness administration, economics,
chemical engineering, electrical
engineering, industrial education,
industrial engineering, mechani
cal engineering and petroleum en
gineering.
Texas Power & Light Co. —
Electrical engineering, mechanical
engineering, accounting, agricul
tural economics, agricultural en
gineering, business administra
tion and economics.
San Antonio Air Material Area
— Aeronautical engineering, elec-
—WELCOME AGGIES—
Dine Out Tonight
Large T-Bone or Sirloin—Char-Glo Broiled
Salad—Baked Potato—Hot Rolls—$1.90
Salad-
Special Top Sirloin Strip
-Baked Potato—Hot Rolls-
-$2.00
Delicious Vz Fried Chicken
Salad and French Fries—$1.25
Thursday Nights—Tasty Spaghetti—$1.25
Sea Food Platter
Shrimp—Oysters—Stuffed Crabs—Scollops—Fillet—Trout
Salad—French Fries—$2.00
Large Golden Fried Shrimp
Salad—French Fries
Large Broiled Flounder
Salad—Baked Potato—$1.50
TRY OUR SUNDAY DINNER—$1.00
The TEXAN
Dining Room
3204 College Avenue
THE BATTALION
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 college and community newspaper
and is under the supervision of the director of Student
Publications at Texas A&M College.
.Veterinary Medicine.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M. is published in College Sta
tion, Texas daily except Saturday,
her through May, and once a week
ouni
durii
ng summer school.
uege
day, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem
all newi
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news
—j • -• Rights of republication of all other matter he
spontaneous origin published herein,
ved.
vs
of
In are also reserve
Second-class postage paid
at College Station, Texas.
MEMBER:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Assn.
Represented nationally bj
National Advertising
Service, Inc.,, New York
City, Chicago, Loe An-
teles and San Francisco.
■ school year, $6.60 per full year,
ising rate furnished on request.
College Station, Texas.
News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-(
YMCA Building. For advertising
editorial office. Room 4,
6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the
delivery call VI 6-6416.
ALAN PAYNE
EDITOR
Managing Editor
Sports Editor
Gerry Brown Associate Editor
Ronnie Bookman
Van Conner
Dan Louis, Ronnie Fann - News Editors
Kent Johnston, Glenn Dromgoole, David Morgan, Clovis
trical engineering, industrial engi
neering and mechanical engineer
ing.
Dallas Power & Light Co. —
Electrical engineering and mech
anical engineering.
Howard, Needles, Tammen &
Bergendoff — Civil engineering.
Minneapolis-Honeywell — Elec
trical engineering, industrial engi
neering, mechanical engineering,
mathematics and physics.
Union Oil Co. of California —
Chemical engineering, mechani
cal engineering and chemistry.
U. S. Naval Air Test Center —
Aeronautical engineering, electri
cal engineering and mechanical
engineering.
The latest Khrustchev per
formance coincided with new Pe-
king-Moscow maneuvers edging
toward the possibility of a top-
level meeting on the deep differ
ences between the two parties.
In the wake of the Khrushchev
blast, the Soviet government
newspaper Izvestia announced
that Red Chinese leaders had ac
cepted the Soviet Premier’s pro
posal for talks to end the public
wrangling.
Apparantly, somewhere in the
upper reaches of the Kremlin,
somebody agrees with the Chi
nese that de-Stalinization has
been used as a tool to break down
Communist party control.
If Khrushchev is to mend the
break in the Red front, he will
have to start at the bottom, where
cracks in the edifice can be most
harmful. To the Chinese, the idea
that there can be peace between
ideologies is the most dangerous
of all.
This will serve the Kremlin and
the party leadership in several
ways. First, jt is a sharp warning
to the younger generation to get
into line and stay there. Second,
it is a warning that the Commu
nist party leadership must be be
yond all blame for any wrongs
committed by Stalin, despite the
obvious fact that the older gener
ation of leaders cooperated fully
with the old dictator. Third, it is
a signal to Communists abroad
that the day when heresies are
tolerated is just about over.
If this is the Kremlin attitude,
it could go a long way in mollify
ing the Red Chinese. But it seems
unlikely Peking will want to make
peace with Khrushchev himself
In their view, he has gone too
far to be wholly absolved. The
indications are that they’d still
like to see him removed from
power.
Bulletin Board
Hillel Foundation will meet at
7:30 p.m. at the Hillel Building.
Ted Freedman, director of the
Southwest Section of the Anti-
Defamation League of B’nai
B’rith, will speak.
AGGIES... DON’T DELAY!
Order Your Boots Now For Future
Delivery - Small Payment Will Do
YOUR BOOTS MADE TO ORDER
Convenient Lay-Away Plan
ONLY $55.00 A PAIR
Economy Shoe Repair & Boot Co.
509 W. Commerce, San Antonio
CA 3-0047
’ J
Basil Ivatlib^
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aiitol)i^ ni l' h
We will have a booth in MSC from 3 p. m. to 5pj.
Thursday March 14th. Mr. Rathbone will be aval
to autograph copies of IN AND OUT OF CHARACTEi
The Exchange Store
“Serving Texas Aggies”
McCallister, John Wright
Staff Writers
Attention
SOPHOMORE:
Your sweetheart will be prettier than ever
wearing her AGGIE corsage from the Student Floral
Concession. See your dorm salesman or stop by the
Floriculture Greenhouses, Thursday or Friday 8-5.
m
An oriental
using Centei
the presenta
scholarships :
the JETS Sou
ference to b(
Hetnorial St
conference is
for high sch<
JETS staii'
leering Tech
tional organiz
extracurriculs
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will ser
Wiener
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One day . . ,
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1 P.m. da
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entered Nurs
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Stedent wife
* ENGINES
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‘08 Old
Dist
Roy
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Add
Double Cymbidium and
Cattleya Orchid and
Carnation Corsages
Student Floral Concession
“RUN BY AGGIES FOR AGGIES”
Gained
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^tisfac
Say;
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13
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