Page 2 THE BATTALION ' Thursday, March 12, 1964 CADET SLOUCH College Station, Texas by Jim Earle 1 Reynolds 9 I / by Mike Reynolds Republicans in the country are dissatisfied with the present front-runners for the race and the middle-of-the-road and the far right which they represent. This turn to Lodge and Nixon seems to represent the hard core of people who voted for Nixon in 1960 and those who elected Ei senhower in 1962 and ’56. Lodge was U. S. representative to the U. N. during the Eisenhower ad ministration. The ballots also showed people such as Pennsylvania’s Governor William W. Scranton that no one can claim a “clear call’ from the party faithful. President Johnson showed de finite strength in his polling of 28,000 votes, but the 24,000 write- in Votes for Attorney General Robert Kennedy for vice-presi dent could possibly fan the flames of the Bobby-Lyndon quarrel which could damage the Demo cratic cause across the nation. Nothing like the write-in phen omenon for Lodge appears to be likely in California because state laws allow no delegates to rep resent a write-in candidate. The contest there should point out the true favorite of the Rockerfeller- Goldwater duo in a state that registers voters in a 3-2 ratio in favor of the Democrats. Either way both men’s campaign took a definite down hill turn and a rousing victory will be needed between now and convention time to interest anyone in either of the men as the party standard bearer. At the risk of angering the fairer sex, one thing could be sug gested by the primary results. Senator Margaret Chase Smith’s fifth place finish seems to indi cate that no one is interested in a woman as president. Senator Smith is undaunted, though. She plans to carry her campaign into the April 14 hassle in Illinois and the Oregon fight in May. The Republicans have not indi cated a candidate by any means, but a trend may possibly have started and the path ahead for Barry and Nelson look extreme ly rough. El Paso will meet in Room 3-B of the'Memorial Student Center J\T TT ^^ : 30 .p.m. ^ ^ W '• Now that the smoke has clear ed from the highly rated, and possibly over rated, New Hamp shire presidential preference pri mary, it remains for the analysts to pick up the pieces anrf see what is left. The candidates don’t have time. Governor Nelson Rockefeller and Senator Barry Goldwater left for California only hours after they were defeated by a strong write-in campaign for Ambassa dor Henry Cabot Lodge. May 15 will bring the primary test in Oregon and June 2, the battle moves south to the sunny land of California. The fact that Goldwater will be the only western candidate in the Oregon primary gives him little time to stop and think be cause Lodge’s name has turned up on the ballot in Oregon and despite the fact that Lodge says he will remain in Saigon, he will cause both Goldwater and Rocke feller to lose a lot of sleep be tween now and June. “The write-in victory for Lodge and the latent strength of the tally for Nixon could possibly mean that the people of New Hampshire and the rest of the Bulletin Board THURSDAY Hometown Clubs Abilene will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 208 of the Academic Building. Amarillo will meet in the And erson Room of the YMCA Build ing at 7:30 p.m. Bay Area will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 203 of the Academic Building. Bellaire will meet in Room 206 of the Academic Building at 7:30 p.m. Corpus Christi will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3-C of the Memorial Student Center. Dallas will meet in Room 108 of the Academic Building at 7:30 p.m. Eagle Pass will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Art Room of the Memorial Student Center. “If that’s a ‘Letter to the Editor’—forget it! There’s such a backlog of letters on this political kick that yours won’t get printed before summer!” Education Group Has Secret Plans Guadalupe Valley will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the lobby of the Mem orial Student Center. Laredo will meet in Room 3-C of the Memorial Student Center at 7:30 p.m. Pasadena Area will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Birch Room of the Memorial Student Center. Rio Grande Valley will meet in Room 208 of the Academic Build ing at 7:30 p.m. San Angelo-West Texas will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 2-B of the Memorial Student Center. Spring Branch will meet in Room 205 of the Academic Build ing at 7:30 p.m. Tyler-Smith County will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Social Room of the Memorial Student Center. Waco - McLennan County will meet in the Cabinet Room of the YMCA Building at 7:30 p.m. Wichita Falls will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Biological Sci ences Building. TV. //. Victor May Enter Texas Race NEW YORK > — Henry Cabot Lodge will be entered in the Texas as well as the Oregon primary and will be back in the United States sometime to cam paign, one of his leading sup porters said Wednesday. “It is not a question of wheth er he will be back but when,” Robert R. Mullen, of Washington, national coordinator of the Draft Lodge Committee, told newsmen here. Lodge, ambassador to Viet Nam and easy winner in the New Hampshire Republican presiden tial preference primary in a write-in vote, has said he has no plans to resign his diplomatic post or return to the United States. ; . T.K AGGIES—get your themes, notes, outlines and thesis’ bound into a hardback book or plastic binder or have that old text rebound at ECONOMICAL PRICES. Come by the National School Bindery, Inc., located at the rear of Loupot’s temporary location, for all types of book and plastic binding. 4 THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the student writers only. The Battalion is a non tax-supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and operated by students as a university and community news paper and is under the supervision of the director of Stu dent Publications at Texas A&M University. Members of the Student Publications Board are James L. Lindsey, chairman ; Delbert McGuire, College of Arts and Sciences ; J. A. Orr, College of Engineering; J. M. Holcomb, College of Agriculture ; and Dr. E. D. McMurry, College of Veterinary Medicine. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M is published in College Sta tion, Texas daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods. Septem ber through May, and once a week during summer school. The dispatch< spontaneous origin i in are also reserved. Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for repub ies credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper origin published herein. Rights of republication of all republication of all news and local news of other matter here- Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. MEMBER: The Associated Press , Texas Press Assn. Represented nationally by National advertising Service, Inc., New York City. Chicago^: Lob An geles and San^uFrifncisco. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6. per sci subscriptions subject to 2% sales tax. Advertisin_ The Battalion. Room 4, YMCA Building; College fVll \ddrees : >1 year, $6.50 pe rate furnished i Station, Texas. ■r full year. request. News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the editorial office. Room 4, YMCA Building. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. Glenn Dromgoole, John Wright - News Editors DAN LOUIS JR EDITOR Ronnie Fann Managing Editpr Jim Butler Hdi*.r Marvin Schultz, Maynard Rogers AsstiJSpcrti Elittfrs Mike Reynolds, Bob Schulz, Clovis ■ W McCallister, Ray Harris, Larry Jerden : Staff Writers AUSTIN (A>) _ Governor John Connally’s higher education study committee made tentative rec ommendations Wednesday on jun ior college policy, but would not disclose them. The committee, in closed ses sion all but an hour, also con sidered its relations with news men. The group came to no conclusions as to whether to open its meeting further or to continue excluding news reporters from its deliberations. Reporters were present this morning when statistics were presented comparing Texas pub lic senior colleges and univer sities with those of several other states in such things as federal research funds, library size relative to enrollment, number of doctor’s degrees granted and faculty salaries. The figures were discussed la ter by the committee in closed session as it attempted to for mulate some numerical stand ards by which it could measure excellence, a quality Connally says he wants the state’s insti tutions of higher learning to at tain. Connally was present through out most of a news conference held in the capitol following the committee meeting. Zachry said the committee would assemble its preliminary recommendations April 18 so the first draft of its report can be written in time for further dis cussion by the committee May 9. Dr. Ben Jones, president of Navarro Junior College, reviewed recommendations his subcommit tee on junior colleges had made to the full committee. Zachry said some had been adopted and some changed, but would not say which ones. Several of the recommendations were based on the establishment of a state coordinating board fox- higher education, which the com mittee has tentatively decided to recommend. Jones said his group had pro posed, among other things: 1. That junior colleges not be elevated to four-year status. “If a senior college is needed, it is recommended that a new one be built,” he said. 2. That the proposed state co ordinating board continue the present standard of approving a new junior college only where it is 50 miles or more from an existing junior college. 3. That the state coordinating board recommend legislation that would authorize enlargement of junior college districts that fall within one county but have a large proportion of students from outside the county. 4. That the state coordinating board encourage local junior college districts to increase tax income where necessary to equal ize standards across the state. 5. That the state coordinating agency encourage vocational and technical course offerings by pro viding adequate financing. FRIDAY ‘BUS STOP’ SATURDAY ‘THE HUSTLER” Saturday Nite Preview Also Sunday “THE OUTSIDER” “Sports Car Center” Dealers for Renault-Peugeot & British Motor Cars Sales—Parts—Service “We Service All Foreign Cars”! ■ 1422 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517: COMPULSORY COLLEGE Free Higher Education Gets Administration Help WASHINGTON (CPS) — A plan providing two free, compul sory years of college is gaining the support of President Johnson’s administration. An indication of White House backing came in a speech this week by Labor Secretary W. Wil lard Wirtz who proposed extend ing the legal required education age to 18 in an effort “to get youth unemployment out of A- merica’s bloodstream.” Wirtz took time out from talks with labor officials over the boy cott of wheat shipments to Russia to outline the plan. If studies now required stu dents to continue their education for two years after high school, Wirtz said half of the 2.5 million youths in the hard-core unem ployment lists would be back in school. Wirtz noted that the number of unemployed youths with mea ger educations is radically higher than among those with 11 to 12 years of education. While not offering the plan as an official government pro gram, Wirtz emphasized that it was a thought germinating with in the administration for the past several months. Observers saw Wirtz’s state ment as a further indication that administration economists fear that the historic income tax cut bill won’t sufficiently help un employment problems facing the nation. Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D- Conn., the late President Ken nedy’s first Health, Education, and Welfare Secretary, has led attacks on the income tax cut's ability to spur employment. Ribicoff said the hard-core un employed —• including the large number of school drop-outs — are unskilled. No amount of money pumped in the U. S. eco nomy can create jobs for the un educated Ribicoff asserts. A state-federal all out effort for two years of public college would drastically drain the na tion’s limited teacher resources at first. But education officials feel a new demand would spark higher quality and salaries for U. S. teachers. The largest U. S. education group — the National Education Association (NEA) — has term ed present free education stand ards inadequate for life in a com plicated U. S. society. As Wirtz said, current stand ards “were adopted 150 years ago and are 150 years out of date.” Sponsored by the NEA, the Educational Policies Commission urged two free years of col lege-level study for U. S. high school graduates. “The nation as a whole has never accepted the idea of uni versal opportunity as applying to education beyond high school,” the commission said. “It is time to do so.” The NEA group said students should be given general courses rather than training for a spec- fic job during the two years “to develop the tendancy and a. bility to define problems as well as solve them.” Accessibility was just as im portant as flexibility for students during the two years of college, the group said. Public colleges, the report said, “should exist in every population center, and they should expand through their range beyond their immediate environs through ra- __ dio, television, self-teaching de- vices, extension programs and correspondence courses.” Neither Wirtz nor the NEA group mentioned the cost of a two-year free college program. For vocational education alone in 1965, the administration plans to spend $183.3 million not to mention federal millions indirect ly flowing into coffers of present junior colleges. Job Calls FRIDAY Autometics, A Division of North American Aviation, Inc. — Electrical engineering, mechani cal engineering, mathematics, physics and statistics. Brazos Electric Power Cooper ative, Inc. — Electrical engineer ing. Bureau of Public Roads — Civil engineering. Corpus Christi Public Schools — Industrial education and math ematics. Dallas Power and Light Com pany — Civil engineering, elec trical engineering and mechanical engineering. Ford Motor Company — Ac counting, business administration, chemistry, economics, mathema tics, agricultural engineering, physics, chemical engineering, electrical engineering, industrial engineering, mechanical engineer ing and nuclear engineering. General Electric Company — Aerospace engineering, chemical engineering, electrical engineer ing, industrial engineering, me chanical engineering, chemistry, mathematics and physics. Motorola, Inc. — Electrical en gineering. Pan Geo Atlas Corporation - Electrical engineering, geological engineering, mechanical engineer- f ing, petroleum engineering and physics. Rocketdyne, A Division of North American Aviation, Inc.- Aerospace engineering, chemical engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, nuclear engineering, chemistry, mathematics and phy sics. Space and Information Sys- ■ terns, A Division of North Amer- f ican Aviation, Inc. — Aerospace^ engineering, civil engineering, electrical engineering, mathema- i tics, mechanical engineering and | physics. 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Schulz 10 LIKE TO TELL EVERV KID WHO PLAYS BASEBALL HO0 HOT TO SET "LITTLE LEAWEP’S ELBOU).’.'.. and i‘d especially like to tell THEll? AWLT MANAGERS AND COACHES tips OOR A6E OR EV'EN OLDER just Aren't developed enough to throw a ball hard INNINS AFTER INNING.. MAYBE THATS OOR TROUBLE... OUR INNINGS ARE TOO LONG i A F T1 is i stud of c t: is houi druj that A inst a s gra; of 1 the diff equ atoi T a s] by h T B i will Tex Foo ann Rar D men cha at ] on tion Am Erii A firn CUS! hyd T noo: the atic is Foo tion G ligh talli ed i ship chir gra; “Pr G. ] Biol Yal Gar cha lyti Ap] Dr. Che G invi H T H hibi Hig nig cho: C Bell Spe sho- A Con gro ann mal loca D al i divi ters sev< T be Con clud T Cho sing the Nor sym N the