The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 10, 1964, Image 3

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    SCONA X
in cooperation with
THE GREAT ISSUES COMMITTEE
Presents
“Challenges To The Americas”
Pan American Trends: Promise or Threat?
A Panel Discussion
Thursday, December 10, 8 P. M.
MODERATOR
Mr. Tomas Pastoriza
Dominican Republic Businessman
n A
Mr. John Gallagher
Vice President
for International
Operations
Sears Roebuck
and Company
T. C. Hammond,
Senior Member of the
Latin American Division
of the Department of
External Affairs, Canada
Student Conference On National Affairs
Public Invited—No Admission Charged
Discussion Will Be In M.S.C. Ballroom
What A Prize
This is the door prize to be given at the Range and Forestry
Club Turkey Shoot Dec. 12-13. The prize is the .22 caliber
automatic rifle donated by Sears—not Miss Lynn Davis.
The shoot will be at the A&M Research and Development
Annex, from 1 p. m. until dark.
Modern Art Talk Slated
“Modern Art” will be the topic
of a talk by Joe Donaldson Jr. of
the School of Architecture at 8:30
p.m. at the Coffee Loft at North
Gate.
This will be the last program be
fore the holidays at the Coffee
Loft which is located upstairs in
the Presbyterian Student Center
Building.
Past programs have included
poetry readings, folk singers and
dramatic presentations.
The Coffee Loft is open each
evening of the week for students
to meet, study and visit.
THE BATTALION
Thursday, December 10, 1964
College Station, Texas
Page 3
LOUNGE REACTION
Home Comfort
Can Be Found
By LARRY JERDEN
Special Writer
Everyone in the new and reno
vated dorms and almost everyone
Connected with A&M is aware of
the beautiful lounges built in the
Sbisa Hall area.
These modem structures, sym
bolic of the forward strides taken
by the university in the last few
years, contain practically “all the
comforts of home.” There are tele
phones, three to a lounge; a tele
vision, capable of getting a clear
picture of Channel 3 with ease;
drink and “cush” machines for
starved studiers; card tables for
those tired of studying, and mod
em furniture resting on deep
carpeting. Final touches are added
by the “fireplace” and paintings on
the wall.
It isn’t very hard to hear ex
tremely favorable comments about
the lounges, and in typical Aggie
tradition, gripes are heard, too. In
the lounges serving civilian stu
dents, a crowd of 30 to 50 may be
found any evening, some watching
television, others playing cards
and/or engaged in a multi-lingual
“discussion,” and a poor soul or
two on the phones pleading for
quiet while he tries to make a date
with his girl attending Tokyo Uni
versity via a $12-for-three-minutes
call. It is really a happy bunch
in there, and you can just see all
the grade points being chalked up
by these hard-working Ags.
There have been some adverse
comments, some of them blamed
on the students, others innate in
the design of the dorms. The most
often heard is one that is a carry
over from the old lounges: the
refreshment machines don’t work.
SAFEWAY
Spinach
D«l Monttc UCansUU .
Corn Meal QQ*
Cov»r*d Wagon, flag
Peach Preserves
taproNb Jar’ VV
With $5.00 Purchase
Maxwell House CQ4
AH qrindi. (12{ Off Label].
pi mr'.
FOOD SALE
DON’T BUY UNTIL YOU SEE SAFEWAY
Christmas Trees
Beautifully Shaped. Deck your house
with a Fresh, Green Treel
Douglas Firs
Scotch Pines
2
4-Ft#
From
4
8-Ft. From
89*
$2*
Sliced Peaches
Fruit Cocktail
Green Peas
Or Hafvei. Del Monte.
Yellow Cling.
Del Monte.
Five fruit* — ready to serve.
Del Monte. Early Garden.
3 r*88*
5188*
5 “88*
'sWiJtvp' !■
51 Tkla CeHjeea Worth 10
Free Geld Bead Staaapa
Pt«0 ytnr rofnlorty Mrnod ••M ftowpo
with thd wurchdid «t
4l-Oi. I.ttf. Me Ua4e
SALAD OIL
Cdupea luplrea December If, IM4.
(J) This Coupon Worth 100
Free Gold Bond Stamps
PIWO yeur regularly earned Cold lond Stamp*
with the purchase of
IS-O& Jar Airway
INSTANT COFFEE
Coupon Expires December 12, IfM.
($ This Coupon Worth 100
Free Gold Bond Stamps
Plus your regularly earned Gold lond Stamp*
with the purchase of
Two Poire (ff# Value I
Asoortod Sleo* and Cefere
Truly Fine Ladies’ Hose
Coupon Expires December 12, IW4.
(5) This Coupee Worth 2S
Free Geld Bend Stnmpe
no mr muw o*m Im4 tt*ne*
»lt* MftkSM M
1S-U. Ba« Ka4
POTATOES
Coupee lx pi re* December It, IH4.
This Coupon Worth 100
Free Geld Bond Stamps
find four regularly oerned Gold Bond Stamp*
with the purchase of
Aoy Two Moovy Boof tIHolo,
Polt-eot Roead, T-Bone or
PORTERHOUSE STEAK
Coupon Expires December 12, 1944.
Tomato Catsup..-. 5
Green Beans 4 - $ 1 Golden Corn 5
Del Monte. Whole. B Cans ■■i Del Monte. Cream Style.
H-Or.
Bottles
Ho.
303
Cant
88*
88*
Safeway Guarani—I
Ivory Hem of Safeway f* »eU oo o Meooyboel
nuerenfee. TVl* mean* the full purchase prise
wll bo eheerfufty refunded oo any Hem that
’doe* net give yen complete sattsfecHen.
Ship Safiw&y with CiitUlHift
FANCY WHOLE
HOLIDAY NEEDS...
FRESH EGGS
Large 'A' Quality Do , 454
Walnuts, Pecans, Almonds and Brazil Nuts
BULK NUTS 2 Lbs .98c
Million Pound Sale!.
FIG BARS
FRYERS
Busy Baker.
Ice Cream
Snow Star. Auorted Flavor*.
GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS
Fresh, rTpo
and delicious.
Wonderful
in Banana Nut Bread!
Apples
Oranges
Delicious Red.
Fresh and Criip.
Juicy
Ripe.
U.S.D.A. Inspected. Grade "A"
Full-meated. Tender and delicious.
(Manor House or Regular Cut-Up Pryors, Lb. 31«)
Lb.
25*
Sliced Bacon
Spareribs
Pork Roast 354
loiton Butt. S»rni-Bon»l«i. Lb. WWWW
Sv. ifi - Pi smium.
Flavorful
end delicious.
I-Lb. |
Pkg.
404
33<
Canned Ham 3 *2 69
Pork.
Lean and meaty. 3 to 5-Lb. Avg.
Armour’, Star. Haat and larva.
More Safeway Values...
Kodak Film
Rescue Copter
Facial Tissue 5
Black and White. No. 127 or
No. 520. [Includes Processing).
For Boys!
Roll
Each
*125
694
*1
Pepto-Bismol
Stock
up, now!
4-Ox.
Bottle
49*
Pres-To-Logs
200-Ct.
Boxes
For your
fireplece.
4-Ct.
Box
89*
Pears ,, 19*
Grapes ass. ». 19*
Squashu 19* Cucumbers. .2.19* Radishes:^ t.v 5*
Prita, and Coupon! E#.e-
♦hro Ttiurm^ Fri. and Sa4,
Dacambar 10, II and II, In
Bryan.
Wa Rei.rva tba Right to
Limit Quantities. No Solas
to Dealers.
Ol SAFEWAY
eCopyrlght It**. Safeway Staras Inearporatad.
One civilian student admitted, how
ever, that all the machines in his
lounge were working at the same
time one night, so there is hope.
The phones are not separated
from each other by anything but
a board, and the whole area has
not a trace of sound-proofing, so
phone calls usually end up as yell
ing contests: the callers trying to
outyell each other, the television
and the crowd.
In the less-used Corps lounges
the noise problem isn’t as bad, but
then the phones in the Dorm 18
lounge still aren’t connected. An
interesting complaint from the
Corps lounges arose when the
seniors in Dorm 17 locked the doors
connecting that dorm with its
lounge, and some in Dorm 18 put
a sign declaring the door con
necting it with the new relaxation
center off-limits to all except
themselves in the evening hours.
The fish and sophomores are
sitting call-to-quarters nights, so
conditions aren’t quite as crowded
in their lounges.
The big weekends offer chances
for Aggies to show off their new
possessions, and from visitors, the
lounges draw their highest praise.
One cadet’s date paid the lounges
perhaps their greatest compliment
when she said, “Why, it doesn’t
even seem like A&M anymore!”
Rebel Students
Get Victory
At Berkeley
BERKELEY, Calif. <A>) —Jubi
lant rebel students at the Univer
sity of California held a noon rally
Wednesday to celebrate “victory”
in obtaining faculty backing of
their sit-in battle against restric
tions on political activity.
“Magnificent,” said Mario Savio,
leader of the Free Speech Move
ment, after the faculty Academic
Senate adopted 824-115 a resolu
tion recommending that the stu
dents be given most of what they
have been demanding through four
massive sit-in demonstrations.
Savio, choking at times with
emotion, told his rally audience of
2,500, “We have arrived at a point
where we have to be responsible.”
Many of the coeds were sobbing as
Savio added, “I am confident that
the students and faculty will exer
cise their freedom with the same
responsibility they’ve shown in
winning their freedom.”
University President Clark Kerr
declined comment on the Academic
Senate proposal.
The university’s Board of Re
gents will meet Dec. 18 in Los An
geles to consider the 1,200-member
faculty group’s proposal which in
cludes
— Freedom to advocate on the
campus any off - campus cause
whether it is legal or not.
— Freedom from campus disci
pline for off-campus political ac
tivity.
A delegation of students planned
to ask Gov. Edmund G. Brown for
dismissal of criminal charges
against 814 arrested in a round-
the-clock sit-in at Sproul Hall last
week.
Dairyman Course
Set Dec. 17-18
The 20th annual Dairyman’s
Short Course will be held Dec. 17-
18 in the Ballroom of the Memorial
Student Center. More than 150
dairymen are expected to attend,
said Dr. R. C. Leighton, professor
of dairy science.
The course is designed to serve
the needs of all dairymen, milk
plant fieldmen, commercial feed
company fieldmen and others di
rectly or indirectly interested in
the future of the dairy industry
in Texas, Leighton said.
Each year’s program is planned
to bring those in attendance up-
to-date on the problems of dairy
cattle feeding, breeding and man
agement as well as the marketing
of milk and milk products.
Dr. R. D. Plowman, leader of
genetics and management investi
gations, from the Dairy Cattle
Research Branch, U. S. Depart
ment of Agriculture, Beltsville,
Maryland, will speak.
His topic is “Selection of Sires
for Herd Improvement.” W. L.
O’Brien, supervisor of Milk Section
from the City of Houston Health
Department, Houston, will explain
“Proper Cleaning of Dairy Equip
ment.”
Other speakers will include Jan
C. Bonsma, a visiting professor in
Animal Husbandry from South
Africa, and Dr. R. V. Jessup, from
Jessup Farms, Glendale, Calif.