The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 15, 1963, Image 2

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    Page 2
THE BATTALION*
College Station, Texas Friday, March 15, 1963
Looking Back . . .
At This Week
CADET SLOUCH
wmmmmmmmm mmm
•'% sA.i'f' ''"'"'I W\* f.
by Jint Earle Bulletin Board
...
TMA Loses Out
In House Budget
Failure of a last-minute amend
ment left the Texas Maritime
Academy completely out of the
House appropriations committee’s
budget bill passed in Austin Wed
nesday.
The House passed a $3.1 bil
lion spending bill for 1964-65.
The proposed amendment, which
would have put the academy back
on the bill, failed by a 71-64 vote.
The appropriations committee
eliminated the academy’s funds
from the budget bill before the
legislation was introduced.
honors.
Jerry B. Linecum, an English
student from Thornton, was nam
ed one of 1,475 winners of the
fellowships, while Robert N. Ma
this of Bryan was named to the
honorable mention list.
Linecum and other winners will
receive a stipend of $1,500 and
dependency allowances, plus tui
tion and fees for the first year
at a graduate school of their
choosing.
The A&M winner, who has a
2.984 grade point ratio, plans to
attend either Duke or the Uni
versity of North Carolina.
Unitarian Fellowship will meet
at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Hillel
Foundation Building. Dr. Stuart
S. Morgan of the Department of
English will speak on “Green
Pastures.”
^■an■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■an
“Sports Car Center’
Dealers for
Renault-Peugeot
&
British Motor Cars
Sales—Parts—Service
;“We Service All Foreign Cars”
!l422 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517
. . . I understand it’s a petition to keep the Maritime Academy!”
Nothing more can be done until
the Senate votes on its budget bill,
then the two bills will be taken
over by a conference committee
composed of five senators and
five representatives.
Loan For Dorms
Mao Only Wants
Nikita To Quit
Job Calls
Gets Approval
A $4,743,000 college housing
loan for A&M was approved Mon
day by the Federal Housing and
Home Loan Administration. The
funds will be used to construct
three new dormitories and reno
vate four existing ones.
The three new dormitories, to
be of brick and four stories high,
will house 1,120 men each. After
renovation, the four other dormi
tories will accomodate 48 addi
tional students. The new build
ings will be in the northeast area
of the main campus.
Renovation and air condition
ing are planned for Dorms 14,
15, 16 and 17.
Contracts for the construction
will be awarded in June by the
A&M System Board of Directors.
Work is expected to begin in July.
2 Students Win
Wilson Honors
Two students were named Mon
day to receive Woodrow Wilson
National Fellowship Foundation
Canadian farms, like those in the
United States, are getting bigger
and fewer.
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
AP Special Correspondent
Mao Tze-tung’s price for peace
between Red China and the Soviet
Union Communist party appears
to be on the complete surrender
by Soviet Premier Khrushchev.
The exchange of Moscow-Pe-
king letters on the need to patch
up differences, therefore, seems
likely to accomplish little unless
Khrushchev is forced by despera
tion—or by his own party—to
make the attempt.
Red China’s response to a So
viet Communist initiative to end
their costly word battle has the
sound of a studied affront to the
Kremlin leader. The text gives
the reader an impression that
Mao feels he has Khrushchev on
the defensive'.
Obviously eager to remove the
wrangle from public view, the
Russians took the first step to
ward a Chinese-Soviet meeting.
Their letter was dated Feb. 21.
The Chinese waited until March 9
to reply.
In the interim the Red Chinese
mounted a massive and violent
propaganda offensive to place
their case before the world Com
munist movement. The effort in-
TEXAS A&M
STUDENT TOUR
departing
JUNE 12, 1963 from New York
SPECIAL GROUP AIR FARE
exclusively for Students, Faculty and their immediate families.
$336.40 JET TO EUROPE & RETURN
NEW YORK - LONDON June 12
PARIS - NEW YORK July 13
Group must have 25 persons and they must depart together June
12 and return together July 13. But they can travel independently
in Europe for 30 days!
All inclusive 4-week European Tour
Air Fare $336.40
Tour Cost 386.00
Total $722.40
*Four Weeks *Sightseeing *Trans Atlantic Jet
*A11 Hotels *Meals *Private motor coach in Europe
ENGLAND, HOLLAND, GERMANY, AUSTRIA, ITALY - ,
MONACO, FRANCE, SWITZERLAND
For additional information contact:
MSC STUDENT PROGRAM OFFICE
Travel Committee
Texas A&M College
College Station, Texas
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu
dent writers only. The Battalion is a mm-tax-supported, non
profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited arid 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.
Lindsey, chairman : Delbert
—' ing; J. M. Holcomb,
ary Medicine.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A.&M. is published in College Sta
tion, Texas daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and h<
ber through May, and once a week during summer school.
holiday periods, Septem-
In are also reserve
n i
ed.
all news
news of
matter here-
Becond-clasa postage paid
at College Station, Texas.
MEMBER:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Assn.
Represented nationally by
National Advertising
" New York
Service. Inc-.,
City, Chicago, Los An-
feles and Si
San Francisco.
er full year,
on request.
New* contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or_VI 6-4910 or at the
Building. For advertising or delivery call VT 6-6415.
editorial office. Room 4, YMCA Buil
ALAN PAYNE
EDITOR
Ronnie Bookman
Van Conner
Managing Editor
„ Sports Editor
Gerry Brown Associate Editor
Dan Louis, Ronnie Fann News Editors
Kent Johnston, Glenn Dromgoole, David Morgan, Clows
McCallister, John Wright Staff Writers
Jim Bulter, Adrian Adair Assistant Sports Editors
J. M. Tijerina - Photographer
eluded a 400,000-word article in
Red Flag, the Chinese theoretical
journal, implying Khrushchev was
a traitor to Leninism and hinting
broadly that he might come to an
unpleasant end.
Only after getting this off their
chests did the Red Chinese reply
formally to the politicly worded
Soviet bid for peace. The reply
was condescending, almost to the
point of insult.
The chances are that some sort
of Chinese-Soviet Communist
meeting is in the works at Cen
tral Committee level. But little
can be done without a face-to-
face meeting of Mao and Khrush
chev.
If the Soviet leader accepted on
terms- laid down in the Chinese
letter, it would indicate more
Khrushchev desperation than the
outside world has suspected. Bar
ring more dickering on terms,
Mao’s price seems, too high.
Mao suggested that Khrush
chev might stop off in Peking
during his scheduled spring state
visit to Cambodia in Indochina.
But there was no suggestion that
Mao was willing to go to Moscow.
Khurshchev purports to be the
top man of world communism, and
would bridle at being the suppli
cant, going to Peking with hat
in hand.
Monday
City Public Service Board of
San Antonio — Electrical engi
neering and mechanical engineer
ing.
Guardian Life Insurance Co. —
Accounting, business administra
tion, economics and education and
psychology.
Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. —
Agricultural economics, business
administration, industrial educa
tion, industrial engineering and
mechanical engineering.
Pasadena Independent School
District — Agricultural education,
education and psychology, indus
trial education, health and physi
cal education, biology, chemistry,
mathematics, physics, English,
history and government and mod
ern languages.
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.
— Accounting.
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. —
Chemical engineering.
West Texas Utilities Co.—Elec
trical engineering and mechani
cal engineering.
U. S. Air Force — Aeronauti
cal engineering, electrical engi
neering, mechanical engineering,
nuclear engineering, business ad
ministration, mathematics and
physics.
Monday and Tuesday
Central Intelligence Agency —
Electrical engineering, economics,
history and government and phy
sics.
Collins Radio Co. — Electrical
engineering, industrial engineer
ing and mechanical engineering.
Tuesday
Southland Paper Mills — Civil
engineering and mechanical en
gineering.
Schlumberger Well Surveying
Corp. — Electrical engineering,
geological engineering, geophy
sics, mechanical engineering, pe
troleum engineering and physics.
Pure Oil Co. — Chemical engi
neering, mechanical engineering
and petroleum engineering.
Read Battalion Classifieds Daily
BESIDES MEXICAN FOOD
ZARAPE RESTAURANT
Serves Mrs. Andert’s Wiener Schnitzel,
Chicken Fried Steaks and Austrian Style
Fried Chicken.
Telephone VI 6-5235
PALACE
Bryan Z‘SS79
LAST 2 DAYS
Charlton Heston
In
“DIAMOND HEAD’
SATURDAY NITE PREY.
11 P. M.
MACABRE MASTERPIECE
AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL prtunU
ED§ARAUANP0E&
1
THE RflVEM
riLMco IN PANAVISION
'dPATHECOLOR
gji-gmi VINCENlPRICE
m'tefy wnlORRE
NW^''*bo«sKARLOFF
i
•TAKE THY
BEAK FROM
OUT MY
HEART . . .
AND TAKE THY
FORM FROM OFF
MY DOOR . ..
QUOTH THE RAVEN:
•NEVERMORE!’”
POE
QUEEN
DOUBLE FEATURE
Sandre Dee
In
“GIDGET”
&
“WEEKEND WITH
LULU”
It
1963 AGGIELAND
PICTURE SCHEDULE
Attention Jr. & Sr. Vet Students
and 5th 'year Architecture Stu
dents.
Aggieland pictures must lie
taken before Wednesday 21"
March if they are to appear
the Aggieland.
Jr. & Sophomore Corps mem
bers will make up Aggieland
pictures from 18-22 March, No
pictures will be made after
March 22.
liewwMNK
* Tchiloren UNDER 12 years- rRfi
)igm;
J
cell
In The Sense of r
and Motivat
be subject ol
nday.
)r, Carl Pfaffnn
fdiology at
wn University
tt of a national
jina Xi.
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
)r, Howard Job
Department o:
ll vice chairma
[ma Xi Chapter
invited to hear
VW DISHY
presents
the legand of
TAFFMANN <
ise of taste is n
of pleasant or
Taste al
lavior, he says.
ion.
K/ng of The Wolfpack
TECHNICOLOR',
H MM vwt MAM* C*.Ik. •tK «u IwiNda
fhe speaker’s cl
biological psyc
icesses and chei
id, he was awai
isby Warren Mi
of Experiment
his research.
Plus
f&
• ie received all
fdiology. They
and the ]
own University
ie in 1937 from
yin England, a
s awarded in 19
iversity in Eng
A NEW AND POWER-U
FULLY DIFFERENT;
KIND OF MOTION
'PICTURE STORY...|
BE WAS A R
1935-38 and
SPECIAL LATE SHOW
Plus
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S
■ .......
iffil
*COLOR^S
mmm
NOW THRU SATURDAY
Charlton Heston
&
Sophia Loren
because
the
tobaccos
are!
In
“EL CID”
(In Color)
STARTS SUNDAY
Cliff Robertson
In
“WONDERFUL TO BE
YOUNG”
(In Color)
CIRCLE
1
21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE
20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!
Vintage tobaccos grown, aged, and blended
mild... made to taste even milder through
the longer length of Chesterfield King.
CHESTERFIELD KING
TOBACCOS TOO MILD TO FILTER, PLEASURE TOO GOOD TO MISS
SPP*
.uLAimrniS
tiactrr e wrw* toiacco c©
ENJOY THE
LONGER
LENGTH OF
CHESTERFIELD
KING
CHESTERFIELD KING
! iv.'jiii.XvwXi i.vU;. - * l-TI-J
The smoke of a Chesterfield King
mellows and softens as it flows
through longer length... becomes
smooth and gentle to your taste.
LAST NITE 1st Show 7:00
Bobby Darin
“PRESSURE POINT
Burt Lancaster
In
“ELMER GENTRY”
(In Color)
OUR SAT. NITE BIG 3
Tina Louise
In
“SIEGE AT
SARACUSE”
nkDe
:tS $2]
Trasl
Si; LOUIS, Mo
pie, a junk de
iina box of tn
it Wednesd;
*d bandits w
lis home.
Pogue’s son-in-
uule, 27, dashi
i a 16-gauge -s
toy and fired
ys he thought a
lite said. Robe
is wounded in
Hack.
Neither Lawrer
-in, William D
the robbery, P;
si said.
Detective Haro
money beloi
iey, 82, a reti
k didn’t believe
iireign S
ii Preset
iisic, Da
fee or dance:
®s will be pi
U when an A<£
sts the Prairie
?e campus.
‘Culture throuj
fuie of the proj
ft by Robert L.
int advisor.-
Coe wives of se
^ at A&M w
1 program,
febers of th
^ Mrs. Ramon
Opines; Dr. a
fe and Abu
’and Mrs. Su
®a; Tso-Wei l
feo Cruzalej
fenas Tat, av
feny; and Jos
*9 and Juan
pa.
&
Dane Clark
In
“MASSACRE”
(Both In Color)
&
Doris Day
In
“WINNING TEAM”
STARTS SUNDAY
“TARZAN GOES TO
INDIA”
“ASK ANY GIRL”
(Both In Color)