The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 29, 1963, Image 2

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    Page 2
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas
Friday, March 29, 1963
| Looking Back . . .
1 At This Week
Dorms At Annex
May Be Used
Two dormitories at the Re
search and Development Annex,
formerly Bryan Air Force Base,
may be used to house civilian
students next year, The Battalion
learned Monday from Bennie A.
Zinn, director of the Department
of Student Affairs.
Interested students have been
filling out questionnaires this
week, and ah indication of how
many students are interested will
probably be announced next week.
The questionnaires are not bind
ing, but are being used simply
to see how many students might
be interested.
Should the dorms be used, stu
dents would pay $12 per month
rent instead of the standard $20
because of the distance between
the college and the annex.
security checks to guard against
loss of material, Library Direc
tor Robert A. Houze announced
Monday.
Sharply increased library loss
es were given as justification for
the planned checks, which will in
clude all persons leaving either
library.
The checks were ^ to begin next
Monday, but a delay has been
caused by problems in working
out details. The system should be
in operation within several weeks.
Library Plans
Security Checks
Cushing and the Engineers Li
brary are planning to institute
Sound Off
Study-Week Plan
With NASA Okayed
A study-work agreement with
NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Cen
ter in Houston was announced
Wednesday by Assistant Dean of
Engineering J. C. McGuire.
Under the plan selected engi
neering students here will alter
nate semesters of study with
equal periods of work at the
sprawling Houston installation.
The center presently needs 20
to 36 students for the program.
The participants will be organiz
ed into pairs, with one in the
classroom and the other working.
a . . i i /» ^ i , i
Editor,
The Battalion:
Wednesday night I was very
much impressed by the play “The
Imaginary Invalid,” which was
presented by the Aggie Players.
The acting and the production as
a whole were excellent. Both the
players and the director certain
ly deserve a great deal of credit
for their effort.
At the end of a semester, they
will change places.
There has been a great deal of
criticism concerning the lack of
culture and art here. I was un
happy to notice the small number
of people attending. Perhaps this
feeling could be altered, if more
people would support this group.
Anthony G. Khamis, ’63
COACH NORTON’S PANCAKE HOUSE
35 Varieties of finest pancakes, aged heavy KC steaks,
shrimp, and other fine foods.
Daily .... Merchants lunch 11 to 2 p. m.
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 r $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 $tu-
Hent 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 commwnity newspaper
and is under the supervision of the director of Student
Publications at Texas A&M College.
McGuire,
School
[he
tlon, Texas daily
ber through May,
at Texas A.&M. is published in College Sta-
ay, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem-
■ummer school.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news
' ' credited
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of
spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter here
in are also reserved.
Becond-clasa postage
at College Station, Ti
paid
exas.
MEMBER:
The Associated Press
Texas Press Assn.
Represented nationally by
bicago,
re lea and San Francisco.
Mail spbscriptions are (3.50 per semester; (6 per school year, (6.50 per full year.
All subscriptions subject to 2% sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request.
Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building, College Station, Texas.
News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the
Building. For advertising or delivery <jall VI 6-6416.
ms n
editorial office, Room 4, YMCA
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, Clovis
McCallister, John Wright Staff Writers
Jim Bulter, Adrian Adair Assistant Sports Editors
J, M. Tijerina - Photographer
CADET SLOUCH
by Jim Earle financial squeeze
Now is that or isn’t that th’ way to select th’ civilian sweetheart?”
Red Powers’ Two Threats)
Indicate Long Stalemate
Baseballers Take
Conference Lead
The Aggie baseball team, one of
the conference favorites, took
over the league lead Tuesday by
defeating Rice here, 5-3. Rice’s
loss, coupled with Baylor’s upset
of TCU, moved the Aggies into
sole possession of the top spot.
The Aggies are 2-0, while both
Rice and TCU stand at 2-1.
Johnny Crain and Bill Hancock
paced the victors. Crain hurled
nearly perfect ball for the last
six innings, while Hancock push
ed the Cadets into the lead to
stay with a homer in the four-run
second inning.
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
CP) Special Correspondent
Soviet Premier Khrushchev’s
latest appeal to the Red. Chinese
included a clear threat to Peking:
Cut out the monkey business or
Moscow will have to get tough.
The swiftness of Peking’s re
tort, rejecting the appeal unless
Chinese terms are met, suggested
that the Mao Tze-tung regime is
telling the Russians: “Go ahead
and try it.”
The Soviet Communist party’s
threat was tucked away toward
the end of its wordy Pravda state
ment on the acrimonious dialogue
between the two Communist party
giants.
Khrushchev told the Chinese he
had been patient and was willing
to talk things over even now, if
the “dogmatists” of the Commu
nist world were willing to correct
their mistakes.
AGGIELAND ’63
A&M College of Texas
College Station, Texas
ATTENTION: Hometown and
Professional Club Representative
In order to meet our deadline
we must require that president’s
pictures, sweetheart pictures,
activity pictures, club write-ups
(not to exceed 200 words) all be
submitted to the Student Publi
cations Office, on the ground
floor of the YMCA, no later than
April 5, 1963.
You are also requested to con
tact John Finks, Dorm 4, Room
206, for professional club group
picture identification, and Joe
Cancellare, Dorm 4, Room 207,
for hometown club group picture
identification.
Those clubs with % page in
the AGGIELAND are reminded
that they may have either a
president or a sweetheart’s pic
ture but not both on the page.
If the required information is
not submitted by April 5, your
page will be printed with avail
able information.
Sincerely,
John Finks, Editor
Professional Clubs
and
Joe Cancellare, Editor
Hometown Clubs
—JUNIORS & SENIORS—
FREE Introductory Gift
Clip and mail to Bernie Lemmons, ’52,
3815 Old College Road, Bryan, Te:
— c isii
of three umci
Nail Clippers, 2. Su
■made,
choice
ude 1.
Bar and Cuff Link
e i
n Glasses, 3. Ti
Set.
Address
_
JOBS IN EUROPE
29,
Grand Duchy of Lux. Mar.
1963.
The American Student Informa
tion Service, celebrating its 6th
Anniversary, will award TRAV
EL GRANTS to first 1500 appli
cants. ASIS is the only au
thorized organization offering
approved summer jobs in
Europe, on a large scale, to U. S.
students.
3,000 paying summer jobs
(some offering $190 monthly)
are available. Jobs include work
ing in Swigs resorts, on Nor
wegian farms, in German fac
tories, at construction sites in
Spain, and at summer camps
in France.
Send $1 for a 20-page Pros
pectus, complete selection of
European jobs. Job Application,
handling and airmail reply.
Write, naming your school, to:
Dept T., ASIS, 22 Ave. de la
Liberte, Luxembourg City, C.D.
of Luxembourg. The first 8000
inquiries receive a $1 coupon
towards the purchase of the new
student travel book, Earn, Learn
and Travel in Europe.
But Pravda added, in a tone the
Red Chinese could hardly mis
take:
“If people continue to follow
their erroneous line, insist on
their mistakes and even aggra
vate them, and increasingly de
part from Marxism-Leninism, it is
imperative to continue and even
step up the decisive struggle
against them.”
Only hours elapsed from the ap
pearance of Pravda’s long appeal
for Communist unity and a state
ment broadcast by Peking, insist
ing that Moscow correct its own
mistakes—such as condoning the
“revisionism” of the Yugoslav
Communists—before the Red Chi
nese will even consider a recon
ciliation.
Just how Khrushchev will carry
out his threat to “step up the de
cisive struggle” against the Chi-
‘Sports Car Center’
Dealers for
Renault-Peugeot
&
British Motor Cars
Sales—Parts—Service
;“We Service All Foreign Cars
■ 1422 Texas Ave. TA 2-451
PALACE
Bryan Z-SS79
LAST 2 DAYS
Tony Curtis
In
“40 POUNDS OF
TROUBLE”
STARTS SUNDAY
TEMPTATION
•..toaiooo
AND ONE
WOMEN!
AND THE
MIRACLES
f0FIHE WORLD
COLORSCOPE
QUEEN
TODAY AND SATURDAY
“THUNDER OF
DRUMS”
&
“NIGHT CREATURES”
nese is difficult to predict. The
Soviet leader is in an awkward
position.
Should the argument between
Moscow and Peking be submitted
to a world court of Communist
leaders, as the Chinese proposed,
Khrushchev could be pictured as
demonstrably in the wrong. He is
undoubtedly, as the Chinese claim,
a deviator from Leninism.
Khrushchev’s policies are based
upon an opportunistic view of the
world. When Communist theory
gets in the way, he sets it aside.
In the case of Yugoslavia,
Khrushchev only about a year ago
still was reminding President Tito
that he was off base in his revi
sions of a Communist theory.
Today Khrushchev is lambast
ing the Red Chinese for insisting
that the Yugoslav party must re
main where Stalin put it in 1948-
outside the Communist family
fold. Khrushchev claims now that
all the world’s Socialists—mean
ing Communists — are basically
just one big family with similar
aims, and that minor sins should
be overlooked in the name of
unity.
'S1.; Flic, r « PITT 1
* * (HIIQREN UNDEH2 YLARS- rRffc
FIRST B-C SHOWING
THE SIZZLER YOU
| READ ABOUT IN
H PLAYBOY
MAGAZINE!
UAYNE
MANSFIELD
SECOND BIG ATTRACTION
MI RYAN
ROBERT SIACK
house
CAMERON MIICHEU
bamboo
LATE SHOW TONIGHT
GUNS OF THE
BLACK
WITCH
-Plus—
A FOUR CROWN Prodcctio*
Study Tells
me Spe
Ned 511 Be S l
For Low Tuition
iLectun
(Special to The Battalion)
WASHINGTON — The case for
keeping tuition at a minimum at
public colleges and universities
has been bolstered by an analysis
of family income made recently
by Elmer D. West of the Amer
ican Council on Education.
A large proportion of these
families had young children, West
continued. Of the families with
six or more children under 18
years of age, 59.2 per cent had
annual incomes lower than $5,000
he said, with 49.7 per cent of the
Stuff Foe pakiy
ha.
aM, *
/itwA'
MS*
The Lettermen bring their fresh
and imaginative sound to twelve
great songs that deserve to be sung.
The result? “College Standards?
the Lettermen’s newest Capitol
album. There’s romance written
all over every song, from Frater
nity Row’s “The Sweetheart of
Sigma Chi” to Broadway’s “The
Party’s Over’.’
Look for “College Standards”
on Capitol... and be sure to look
for the Lettermen in concert on
your campus.
(S)T-1829
©CAPITOL RECORDS INC.
5-children families and 38,5 jg
cent of the 4-children families:
the under $5,000 family inco® •, l. F. Tribbli
bracket.
Among families whose incoa aic ^ an( ^ C0U1
'ersity of Mis
University of
ialist will spe
luate Lecture
in the Animal
Lecture Room,
jr who has cha
West gave his appraisal in a
talk to the College Scholarship
Service Meeting in New York
City, as part of a review of the
national scholarship situation.
fell under $6,000 a year, he coi
tinned, were 69 per cent of tins
with six or more children, ti
per cent of those with five
ren and 55 per cent of those itf|
four children.
plans for re
Institution he
fibble’s principt
toncerned witl
management
According to the Census Bu
reau, the median U. S. family in
come in 1960 was $5,620, West
said, indicating that half the
families in the country had in
comes below that figure. Twenty-
two per cent, or one in five fam
ilies, had incomes of less than
$3,000 a year, West said, and on-
other 20 per cent had family in
comes between $3,000 and $4,999
a year. All figures were for in
come prior to taxes, he pointed
out.
J litters and th
‘These families, it seems toalagement of g
represent what may be essailing pigs,
ally new territory for thewas reared <
covery and development of im| [issouri and af
but talented children. I have!
feeling not enough has yet tea ity of Missoui
done for them,” West said,
“College costs are going up,!,
up,” he continued. “Perhaps h
come will, too, but at present! n
is not rising as fast as tuiiia Ul/iVG 1
and fees.”
—Job Calls
“It is hard to see how families
with such incomes can offer their
children much hope of a college
education,” West declared. “Al
though a few individuals will as
pire to and attain a college edu
cation, in general, hope — if it
comes at all — must come largely
from outside sources.”
Monday
F. W. Woolworth Co. — Bb
ness administration.
Tuesday
Boy Scouts of America
cultural economics and sociolffl
business administration, educate
and psychology, industrial edtt i, speak Friday
tion and physical education.
Link-Belt Speeder Corp - Ci
vil engineering, industrial distri
bution, industrial engineer®,
mechanical engineering and busi
ness administration.
World War II
:d his Ph.D
iged in teachii
staff membe
Vet
Coil
acuity member
feterinary Met
ted to hear Dr
of the Sect
iicine at the U
reaction of ;
School of Aer
oks Air Force
le Brooks schoi
Veterinary Me
ently involved
Ding program,
of the Depart
y Microbiology
he school has
Air Force to
es-to selected
ians who succe
k in the A&M
aboratory anir
fter getting pe
NOW SHOWING
Feature Times
1:00 - 3:10 - 5:20- 7:30-9:1 |ry to grant the
jacKiemimn
ai Lee Rem
“DaYSOFWii
ano Roses” i
CIRCLE
LAST NITE 1st Show 7:15
Betty Davis
&
Joan Crawford
In
“WHATEVER
HAPPENED TO
BABY JANE”
&
Tyrone Power
In
“SUN ALSO RISES”
(In Color)
OUR SAT. NITE BIG 3
No. 1
“TARZAN’S FIGHT
FOR LIFE”
No. 2
“MONEY, WOMEN
AND GUNS”
(Both In Color)
No. 3
Jack Webb
In
“THE D. I.”
STARTS SUNDAY
“MUSIC MAN”
&
“ROME ADVENTURE
PEANUTS
By Charles M, Schuh
I LIKE THE UJA^ HttORE
TALKING IT OP OOT THESE..
I LIKE TO HEARLOK OF CHATTER
DON'T BE CO POLITE.
CHARLIE BROOM.
DON'T ¥00 JUST COM
RIGHT .OUT, AND 5A^ VflO'RE
GLAD you HAVE A TEAM •
' OF LOUDMOUTHS ?i
ary school re
Air Force ca
tee, Capt. Dale
ill Ziegler,
he trainees wil
C
K