The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 01, 1964, Image 2

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    • •• ;
THE BATTALION
Page 2 College Station. Texas Tuesday, December 1, 1964
CADET SLOUCH
by Jim Earle
Reynolds 9 Rap
by Mike Reynolds
One doesn’t know whether to
be offended at the cookie-pushers
from Texas Tech, or to feel hon
ored that they should copy one
of A&M’s greatest traditions, top
to bottom.
The Nov. 21 copy of the Daily
Toreador quotes Ken Snider,
president of the Saddle Tramps,
Tech spirit organization, as he
proposes “. . . an effort to get
all the Raider fans to demonstrate
their spirit throughout the en
tire game.’ They call it the
Twelfth Raider.
★ ★ ★
Food for basketball season
thought.
While we’re on the subject of
spirit, a teasip I know told me
the following after the Turkey
Day game.
“Spirit? Who needs it? We
don’t have spirit and we went
9-1 this year. I just can’t see
how you can stand up there in the
stands game after game and
make fools out of yourselves, act
ing as if you thought you ever
had a chance in the first place.
The Aggies can’t beat Texas at
anything.”
★ ★ ★
The following quote appeared
in the Hilltop News, student
newspaper at Cooke County Jun
ior College, Gainesville, Tex.
A&M University will start con
struction on a $1 million space
research center this spring. It
is comforting to know that by
the time the Russians have six
or eight men orbiting the earth,
we may have Reveille up there
mixing it up with them.”
★ ★ ★
A headline in the Daily Torea
dor for two weeks ago reads,
“Strippers Show Up Regularly In
Men’s Dorm Parking Lots.”
Seems that the stripper is tak
ing wheels off of cars instead of
clothes off of bodies. Although
a patrolman surprised one of the
vandals with a wheel half-way off
a car, he escaped and six patrol
men and a dog could not locate
him in a car-to-car search of the
parking lot.
They really have it rough out
there in Lubbock. The admini
stration will not let students ride
their sidewalk surfboards in the
halls of the dorms.
It is rumored that Hall Hockey
is on its way out here at A&M
to make way for the surfers.
‘Haven’t you guys had enough?”
Sound Off
Editor,
The Battalion:
The 12th man has several re
sponsibilities among which are to
exhibit part of what is the Spirit
of Aggieland and another to sup
port the Aggie team be it basket
ball, baseball, football or what
have you.
Being some 4,000 miles away
from the campus it is not easy to
keep informed of what is hap
pening. However, I know we were
outscored in our first seven
games this season in football and
were able to chalk one up in the
other column by trouncing SMU
23-0. From past experiences I
know this football season is more
than disappointing to most Ag
gies.
The point is that the Nov. 15,
1964 edition of The Stars and
Stripes, a newspaper for U. S.
Armed Forces personnel, con
tained a small article entitled
“A&M Students Told To Get The
Yell Out.” It stated that Coach
Foldberg and Dean Hannigan ask
ed student cooperation in hold
ing down the yelling particularly
when the ball is about to be put
in play by the opposing team. It
further mentioned the stealing of
such things as band hats, bridles,
and blankets from SMU by A&M
students.
These actions do not remind
me of the A&M I left three years
ago. From 1957-1961 we too
were asked to quiet down in some
football games, but it was always
by a yell leader, an official on the
__ Tq dCl lIS ~ ‘ 1 field or the Aggie captain and
the Corps responded by knocking
WEDNESDAY
Prudential Insurance Company
— accounting, business admini
stration, marketing, agricultural
economics, agricultural education,
agricultural engineering, indus
trial education, agronomy, physi
cal education, education, psycho
logy.
Trunkline Gas Company — civil
engineering, electrical engineer
ing, mechanical engineering.
it off until the ball was snapped.
We never had to be asked by
the Dean and no one raised a big
fuss about it. We were in sev
eral fights during those years too
but we never started one — just
finished them. In 1957 TCU paid
a large sum for uniforms, boots,
sabers, etc. stolen or destroyed
during a fight they started in Ft.
Worth. We were proud that it
was not our fault. Whatever the
reason, too much yelling is worse
than none at all and when you’re
asked to quiet down it should be
done and no one should have to
ask you except the Yell Leaders.
This business of stealing band
hats, etc. should be left to the
cookie-pushers.
You people are fortunate to be
attending the best school in the
country and you should keep this
uppermost in your thoughts and
take every opportunity off cam
pus to prove it whether it be by
wearing a uniform neatly press
ed, marching tall and proud in a
Corps Trip parade or yelling at
a ball game. The football team
gives its best in every game, and
its your job to help them win it.
If they are behind, you won’t help
put any figures on that score-
board by acting like an animal
but you will do a lot to influ
ence others about what kind of
school A&M is and whether or
not they will want their young
men to go there. From what I
have heard and read over here
they have not been impressed
favorably in the past several
weeks.
These opinions are based on
what I’ve been informed of and
may not be all true as I am not
in a position to either see or hear
the games. I hope they are not
true. I will have an opportunity
to listen to the game with t.u.
about 9:30 p.m. on Thanksgiving
Day. I hope to hear the men of
A&M yelling loud and clear but
only when they are supposed to.
John M. Bozardt, ’61
1/Lt. Ord. C.
Germany
★ ★ ★
Editor,
The Battalion:
As a candidate for freshman
class president, I will appreciate
your support and vote for this
office.
If I am allowed to serve you as.
your president, it will be my aim,
as your spokesman,
... to know your desires
. . . to express your ideas and
... to work, to the best of my
ability,
... to obtain your wishes
in the student senate, trigon,
Town Hall, Great Issues, Fish
Ball and other campus activities.
Let me work with you and for
you to present a strong voice for
a strong class.
Cullen Looney, ’68
Ferreri’s Triangle Restaurant
Invites You To Try Our
AGGIE SPECIAL
Also, try PIZZA, Spaghetti, Raviola, Mexican Food,
and Seafood.
Book Your Banquets and Special Parties Early.
Accommodations From 10 to 200 Persons
THE BATTALION
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the
student ivriters 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, Collefre of Arts and Sciences ; J. A. Orr, College of Engineering ; J. M.
Holcome, College of Agriculture; and Dr. R. S. Titus, College of Veterinary Medicine.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M is
tion, Texas daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, an<
ber through May, and once a week during summer school.
published in College Sta-
holiday periods, Septem-
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news
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.
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, Los An
geles and San Francisco.
Mail subscriptions 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 m
editorial office. Room 4,
ay be made by telephoning VI 6.6618 or VI 6-4910 or at the
YMCA Building. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415.
EDITOR RONALD L. FANN
Managing Editor - Glenn Dromgoole
Day News Editor Michael Reynolds
Sports Editor Lani Presswood
Night News Editor Clovis McCallister
Asst. New Editor Gerald Garcia
Staff Writer - Tommy DeFrank
Vietnamese Buddhists
Disillusioned With Leaders
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (A>>
— Disillusionment appears to be
growing among many devout Bud
dhists with the leadership of their
faith.
“Vietnamese Buddhism is fall
ing into the hands of self inter
ested politicians and the Viet
Cong itself,” one Buddhist said
Monday. “Last year when we
Buddhists rose up against Ngo
Dinh Diem we were united and
willing to give our lives. Now I
am ashamed to be associated with
what is going on.”
The speaker was among hun
dreds of Buddhist faithful ar
rested in demonstrations against
Diem.
THE BEST IN
MAGAZINE
The Coaches Sound Off!
BIG-TIME vs. SMALL-TIME
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
■ A controversial discussion be
tween coach Duffy Daugherty of
Michigan State and coach Dave
Nelson of small-college power Del
aware on the fierce competition,
high-pressure recruiting methods,
and “must win” psychology that
typify the startling differences be
tween big and-small-time college
football.
*
1964-'65 All-America
BASKETBALL PREVIEW
■ The editors of SPORT scan every
section of the country to select
the nation’s top basketball stars of
the 1964-’65 season.
SPORT keeps you apace of all
events on the college and pro
sports scene. Enjoy expert cover
age, analysis, indepth features,
action photos in
JANUARY
Favorite magazine of the sports
stars and the sports mindedl
NOW ON SALE!
PALACE
Bryan Z-SS79
LAST DAY
‘GUNS OF BATHS!’
STARTS TOMORROW
RoUftBOliT
.iwWALUS™0§§E'ffi
TECHNICOLOR*- TECHHISCOPt*
Northwestern 9 s Library
Considered Campus Lab
By Intercollegiate Press
Evanston, 111. — Northwestern
University will ej-ect a boldy con
ceived $10 million “laboratory”
library, incorporating educational
and architectural concepts estab
lishing it as the intellectual capi-
tol of the University and a new
74-acre campus now under con
struction in Lake Michigan.
Consisting of three separate
but interconnecting research pavi
lions, each rising four stories
above a broad plaza, the new
library will embrace a total area
of 337,000 square feet of tailor-
made space for:
Working collections and stor
age facilities capable of handl
ing more than two million
volumes.
Radial rather than linear ar
rangements of books and re
sources, spreading like sun-
brusts from central informa
tion centers.
A library within a library fea
turing a “core” of key books
set aside from the larger re
search collections.
Solving the problem of ever-
expanding collections crowding
out readers by providing cus
tom-made space for a constant
ly changing, but constant-in-
size, “active” research collec
tion of one million volumes.
Providing individual private
and semi-private study areas
immediately adjacent to the re
search collections for 3,000 stu
dents and 200 faculty at any
one time.
Incorporating up-to-date tech
nology that will enable readers
to communicate by television
and telephone between various
sections of the library, and per
mit adaption of information
retrieval methods as they are
developed.
Rather than row after row and
floor after floor of overwhelming
stacks, the new “laboratory” lib
rary will be divided into three
manageable research pavilions,
one for books devoted to the social
sciences and human behavior, an
other to the humanities, and the
third to history.
Readers will move from the
card catalogue near the main lib
rary entrance, through a single
control point, to elevators which
lead up to the research collections
in each pavilion. Intermingled in
the pavilions will be private study
carrels whcih will enable students
to work near their research ma
terial. On each floor, books will
radiate from the center in every
direction in order to make them
more accesible to readers than
they are in the traditional lineai
stacks.
Student-Faculty Work Space
2,200 undergraduates, 800 grai
uates, and 200 faculty member
will be able to study in the lib
rary at one time, at least half «l
them in individual carrels. Tit
library at one time, at least half
of them in individual carrels. Hit
library’s flexibility will also al
low its undergraduate-gradual*
seating capacity to be altered ts
any percentage future enrollment
increases may make necesary.
Bulletin Board
TUESDAY
Oceanography and Meterology
Wives Club will meet at 8 p.m.
in the Gay Room of the YMCA
Building. The Brazos Valley
Florists will present a program
on floral arrangements.
Entomology Wives Club
meet at 8 p.m. at the home ol
Mrs. Vernon Shives at 3807 Oak-
wood in Bryan.
Band Wives Club will meet at
7:30 p.m. at B-4-D College View.
Business Administration Wives
Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
the South Solarium of the YMCA
Building.
Industrial Education Society
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room
107 of the Mechanical Engineer
ing shops. A representative of
the Knox Glass Co. Inc. of Pal
estine will be guest speaker.
GRADUATE STUDENT
DANCE
Triangle Restaurant
December 5
$3.00 Per Couple
Tickets May Be Purchased
From Cashier’s Window;
MSC or Any Wives Club
Member.
Music By The STANDARDS
CHARLES F. JOHNSON, '62
COLLEGE MASTER REPRESENTATIVE
FIDELITY UNION
LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY
P. O. BOX 45
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS
VI 6-8228
AGGIES!
See The
AGGIE TALENT SHOW
Friday, Dec. 4
Guion Hall
8:00 P. M.
TEN TALENTED GROUPS
Admission 50c — Cheap
WEDNESDAY
Newcomers Club will meet at
10:15 a.m. at Sbisa Dining Hal;
There will be a tour of the kitch
en facilities.
NOW SHOWING
JOSEPH E LEVINE
SOPHIA n“ MARCELLO
lorn mastroh
YesterdayJom
Tomorrow
COLOR
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Ford,
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VI 6-5
Crestli
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Corvair
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SATURDAY NITE SPECIAL
Midnight Preview 12 P. M.
I CHANGED
TlfFPIHffl)
InEtsUmi!
MV SKIN!
NOW
[ KNOW
WHAT IT
FEELS
LIKE TO BE
BLACK!"
CIRCLE
^lASl
LAST NITE
“ROBIN & 7 HOODS’
Now f
exact e
Come
build i
“THUNDER IN
THE SUN”
CAS
PEANUTS
By Charles M. Schulz
PEANUTS
tl'So
PEANUTS
l‘M TOO FEMININE
FOR THIS GAME.'
Enco, a
Mobil, ]
Eennzoi
Ewondi
Whe
Vinyl
only ...
Autolit,
Mylon (
TriumV,
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