The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 15, 1964, Image 2

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    THE BATTALION
Page 2 College Station, Texas Tuesday, December 15, 1964
| Reynolds 9 Rap |
by Mike Reynolds
Almost one month ago the Civil
ian Student Council passed a res
olution stating they were in favor
of changing the place of present
ation of the Aggie Sweetheart to
a home game. It has attracted
very little attention on this cam
pus and the council has been go
ing quietly about its business of
changing another tradition.
Letters have been exchanged
between a member of the com
mittee appointed by the council
and Jane Sullins, president of the
Student Council of Social Activi
ties at TWU, and they are cer
tainly stirred up on that campus.
First of all, why is it that every
year some group, person, confab,
conclave or committee decides
that the Aggie Sweetheart activi
ties are not being handled just
right and that it is time to change
them ? Seems to me you get
better results if you stick with
one system and then work the
bugs out of it.
Second, what are the advan
tages to presenting her at A&M ?
Sure it gives the civilians a
chance to see the ceremony, but
how many other people get the
chance ? Attendance at home
games is the reason that the Ag
gies play only three or four
games at home each year. If
figures are counted, they reveal
that we draw bigger crowds in
Dallas or Fort Worth than we do
in CS. Just as many exes get
together to go to the Corps Trip
as they do to come down here too.
It is argued that we are steal
ing the fire from SMU’s and
TCU’s Homecoming ceremonies.
Does that mean that we should
not take the Corps and the Ag
gie Band too ? If we are going
to press this to the limit, we
should let the Cookie-pushers win
the game so their exes won’t go
home unhappy.
Down through the years, the
Dallas-Fort Worth Corps Trip
has always meant a little bit
more to the Aggies because of the
festivities at TWU. The Tessies
must be considered also.
The sweetheart is just as much
of an honor on their campus as
she is a dignitary on ours. The
Corps Trip is a time when the
freshmen and unattached upper
classmen meet their “sisters” and
it follows that it is the most log
ical time to present the Aggie
Sweetheart to the student body.
Many of the girls don’t even
know an Aggie until the night
before the game, and with Satur
day classes they would never be
able to find time or the means
to come to Aggieland to be part
of the activities.
If the civilians want to see the
ceremony they should get off
their posteriers and make the trip
to Big D or FW. If they would
concentrate their efforts on plan
ning civilian activities in Dallas
and getting a big crowd from the
Suit Brigade in the stands, they
would improve the ceremony
much more than moving it to
A&M ever would.
The traditions of this school are
passing through a time of great
change. It is time to stand pat
and resist the tide. Just because
someone got left out is no reason
to change a very meaningful tra
dition — one that means a lot to
both schools.
Lets make it better instead
of tearing it down.
* * * *
USELESS BITS OF MISIN
FORMATION: I met a fellow
this weekend who actually got
89 shaves with one blade. Seem
incredible ? He was only nine
years old though.
Electorial College
Makes It Official
WASHINGTON, <A > ) — The sel
dom-used gears djf the Electoral
College meshed briefly Monday
as President Johnson and Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey were chosen
to be the next president and
vice president of the United
States.
The 538 members of the Elec
toral College, assembled in the
50 state capitals and the District
of Columbia, voted in accordance
with the popular votes cast by
more than 70 million Americans
Nov. 3.
Thus, 486 Democratic electors
gathered in the 44 states and the
District of Columbia which gave
Johnson and Humphrey a popular
vote plurality.
And 52 Republican electors met
in the six states carried by Sen.
Barry Goldwater and Rep. Wil
liam E. Miller, the GOP nominees
for president and vice president.
Unlike four years ago, when
an Oklahoma Republican elec
tor jumped the tracks, there were
no reports of electors voting for
other than the nominees.
But there was nothing that re
quired them to. As Democratic
elector Charles B. Garrigus, of
Reedly, Calif., put it: “I’ll honor
my promise willingly, but I get
a little secret feeling, of power of
knowing I don’t have to.”
Gov. William W. Scranton of
Pennsylvania, a Republican with
some presidential visions of his
own this year, had this advice
for his state’s 29 electors gather
ed in Harrisburg:
“Yours is the task of proclaim
ing what the people have already
decided. You are here to con
firm the judgment of the people,
not to tamper with it.”
And it appeared that electors
across the nation did just that.
As usual, there was criticism
of the electoral system itself.
Garrigus called it an anachron
ism and “right behind Goldwater
as the closest thing we’ve got in
American politics to a Currier and
Ives print.”
Criticism of the system de
vised at the Constitutional Con
vention is not new. However,
efforts to abolish the Electoral
College or make more than pro
cedural changes have failed.
Only two more steps remain in
the electoral process which began
early this year. On Jan. 6 a joint
meeting of the House and Senate
will canvass the electoral votes
cast Monday and announce the
winners.
CHARLES F. JOHNSON, '62
COLLEGEMASTER REPRESENTATIVE
FIDELITY UNION P. O. BOX 45
LIFE INSURANCE COLLEGE STATION. TEXAS
COMPANY VI 6-8228
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.
Holcome, College of Agriculture; and Dr. R. S. Titus, 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 Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited m 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
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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 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.
CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle
Bulletin Board
TUESDAY
American Society of Mechani
cal Engineers will meet at 7:30
p.m. in Room 2-A of the Memorial
Student Center.
$1 gift for exchange.
WEDNESDAY
Newcomers Club will meet it
9:30 a.m. in the Social Roe
of the MSC.
American Nuclear Society will
meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 211
of the W. T. Doherty Building.
Oceanography and Meteorology
Wives Club will meet at 8 p.m.
in the YMCA Building. Each
member is requested to bring a
Most geologists believe the
earth’s interior is a mighty fur
nace, producing prodigious heat
through the breakdown of radio
active elements such as uranium
and thorium.
DAMAGED and UNCLAIMED
FREIGHT
(New Merchandise)
Furniture, Appliances, Bedding,
Tables, etc. A little of everything,
C & D SALVAGE
E. 32nd & S. Tabor TA 2-0fli
Mmlct/lrl Supply
‘PttituAe. ptoMvw-
$23 5»Collage Av#*Bryan,fas
U. S. Defends Congo Policy;
Blasts Rebel Suppliers
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. <A>)
— The United States declared
Monday that many of the coun
tries criticizing U. S. Congo
policy are openly engaged in sup
plying military aid to the Con
golese rebels.
The U. S. views were laid be
fore the U. N. Security Council
by Ambassador Adlai E. Stev
enson, who deplored the injec
tion of “black racism” into the
Congo debate and protested a-
gainst what he called “irrational,
irresponsible, insulting and re
pugnant language” used by some
speakers.
Stevenson defended the U. S.-
Belgian intervention on behalf
of Americans and others held as
hostages by the rebel govern
ment of Christophe Gbenye as a
purely humanitarian operation.
He noted that critics had failed
PALACE]
Brt»an
NOW SHOWING
JOSEPH E. LEVINE prmnts
THE CARPETBAGGERS
'« PARAMOUNT PICTURES r«teai*
uicoioir pj»r
CIRCLE
to express any interest in the
threats of Gbenye to kill the
hostages.
“We have no apologies to make
to any state appearing before
this council,” Stevenson said.
The council was debating
charges of aggression brought
against the United States and
Belgium by 22 countries, 18 of
them African. Stevenson said
that some of the countries and
others as far away as Moscow
and Peking were aiding the re
bels in violation of U. N. resolu
tions.
Ambassador Achkhar Marof of
Guinea told reporters the spon
sors of the complaint against
the United States and Belgium
will meet Tuesday morning to
consider Stevenson’s statements.
(ffareer
(flub
Multi-Color Stripes
> r 7j t ifVft/'
$4.00
A brand new two color woven oxford stripe authen
tically tailored by Truval with soft roll button down
collar, box pleat and back loop. Contour tapered
sleeves and body for trim fit. Come in and see our
selection of Career Club stripes.
The Exchange Store
“Serving Texas Aggies”
PEANUTS
I U1A5 THE ONIV KID IN
CLAS£ WHO 60T AN “A" IN
THE GEOGRAPHY TEST. 1
-n-M
when you shop at
Lou pot's
CLOTHING SHOP
Sweaters — by Puritan and
Campus Sportswear
Sport jackets — by H.I.S. and Campus.
Shirts — Aetna, Campus and H.I.S.
choose from our large
selection of collegiate styles.
Socks — Esquire and Supp-hose
Hats — by the American Hat Company
Ties — Wembly makes the best.
Shoes — Hush Puppies, to please
any man.
Loupot's
CLOTHING SHOP
at the N. Gate—VI6-6312
By Charles M. Schuli
I WAS THE ONtYONEOWO
KNSJ (OHEge IPANEMA a)tef
LAST NITE
Pamila Tiffin
In
“LIVELY SET”
&
James Stewart
In
“MOUNTAIN ROAD”
THAT UTILE
RED-HAIRED
61RL IS SURE
< CUTE.. >
ID GIVE Alf/THINS IN THE
UJO&D TO BE SITTIH6 THERE
NEXT TO HER EATIN6 LUNCH..
N0THIN6TAKES THE TASTE
OUT OF PEANUT BUTTER LIKE
UNREQUITED LOVE 1
EDITOR
RONALD L. FANN