Aggies Brave Elements As Winter Weather Returns ian ai:£ ten fonrpj r the: ; time.. ntury points en, \ ler. RichS contri! 5-5 in sason, intti lylor ?ht with id a j: A&JI •71 ve 3t Sds ! will t at! n in :s sk ). Jii 16 p: - net ton tor ) Hal mal j ■e in J Uni 6. • wsSSS re: f *<« ►, f A. i A. M -A - t yt* ■■ xmz. ■ : ?ss«,. ’W's ' lr- ,^r* #■ 'A Before Aggies slipped and slid to class Wednesday as the ground for them to climb. College Station recorded the lowest Snow and ice melted so transportation was Some ice still remained late Wednesday was covered with ice and snow. Cars were left in some temperature on this day in history last night. made a bit safer. After the unspoiled white- evening, places because hills, sometimes only slight, were too great ness came the slush, mud, water and cold. H % ? N Che Battalion Texas A&M University Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1965 Number 141 State Department Slates Interview Of A&M Students Richard H. Howarth of the U. S. State Department’s college relations staff will visit campus Monday to acquaint interested students with career possibilities in the U. S. Foreign Service. He will meet with students at 10-11:30 a. m. and 1:30- 3 p. m. in Room 208, Nagle Hall. Foreign Service Officers are diplomats especially selected and trained to assist the Secretary of State in preparing policy recommendations to the president of the United States ♦■and in carrying out the foreign policy decisions. The next annual Foreign Service Officer examination will be held May 1, Dr. J. M. Nance, head of the Department of History and Government and campus liaison of ficer, said. Candidates for the one- day examination must be at least 21 and under 31 years of age at the time of the examination. Those 20 years of age may apply if they have completed their junior year. All candidates must have been citi zens of the United States for at least seven and a half years. The Foreign Service requires of ficers with training in public and business administration, executive management, economics and related subjects as well as those whose mapor courses of study include political science, history, language and area studies, geopraphy and international affairs. Area Folk Singer To Perform Here At 8 p.m. Friday The Aggie Players and the John A. Lomax Folklore Society will present a program of folk music at the opening of the new experi mental theatre in the basement of Guion Hall. Mance Lipscomb, nationally- known Negro primitive folk singer and recording artist, will perform in the Fallout Theatre Workshop at 8 p.m. Friday. Lipscomb, a sharecropper on the Navasota Bottoms and the son of a slave, is known for his original renditions of traditional Texas songs, primitive blues, spirituals and work songs. “Trouble ’n Mind,” Lipscomb’s fourth album was cut shortly after his California concert tour with Jean Ritchie, Pete Seeger, Light- nin’ Hopkins and several other folk musicians. The program will be presented in the new classroom and work shop for Theatre Arts classes and for arena and experimental produc tions of the Aggie Players. Admission for the performance is 75 cents and tickets may be ob tained from any member of the | Folklore Society. Applications to take the exami nation may be obtained from Nance or by writing to the Board of Ex aminers, Foreign Service, Depart ment of State, Washington, D. C. 20520. The completed application form must be postmarked not later than March 15. •*r. Southwest Talent Set For 14th Annual ITS r ^ ,r J A ONE OF ITS CONTESTANTS . . Annette Bogue will represent Stephen F. Austin in Show. Aggressions On Corps A skirmish occurred Wednes day night between members of insurgent athletes and loyalists Corps of Cadets’ Squadrons 10 and 11. The unwarranted, un provoked aggressions (according to the Corps) .by the Civilian ter rorists came as the outfits were marching to their evening meal. Armaments consisted of snow balls, handfulls of ice, and cadets. Second Wing officers pledged that any further attacks would be fnet with the same swift re taliation. Air Force Team Seeking Officers From Senior Class The Air Force Officer Selection team will visit campus Monday through Wednesday to interview seniors interested in the Air Force Officer Training School program. The group, including Lt. R. P. McMichael, officer selection spe cialist from Houston and M/Sgt. LeRoy Balmain, local recruiter will be in the lobby of the Memorial Student Center from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Under the officer training pro gram, applicants must be college graduates or within 210 days of re ceiving a degree; between ages of of 20% and 29%; U. S. citizens; and be able to pass a written and physical examination. The Air Force Officer Quali fying Examination will be arranged for any interested seniors. Further information may be ob tained from Sgt. Balmain, Room 1, Post Office Building in Bryan, or by calling TA 2-3061. The Wortd at a Glance By The Associated Press International SAIGON, South Viet Nam—The United States has unleashed jet planes for the first time against the Viet Cong in South Viet Nam, a U. S. Embassy spokesman announced Wednesday. They have made several strikes. Battles between powerful Viet Cong units and government outfits continued sweeping across moun tainous Birih Dinh Province today, with a rapidly rising casualty toll. ★ ★ ★ TOKYO—When the south Japan fishing port of Kochi junks its buses, it dumps them into the sea with persimmon trees. Officials believe the per simmon trees will encourage growth of plankton, attract fish and help boost a dying fishing industry in Kochi. National MOBILE, Ala.—The homes of a civil rights leader and the mayor of Mobile were fired upon Tuesday night. No one was injured. Police said the incidents were related. Officers said the pistol shootings occurred while the families of Negro leader J. L. Leflore and Mobile Mayor Charles S. Trimmier were watching a Mardi Gras parade in downtown Mobile. ★ ★ ★ WASHINGTON—Walter Jenkins said in testi mony made public Wednesday that a Maryland insurance man bought Texas television advertising time “to be competitive” in an effort to sell $100,000 worth of policies on President Johnson. The onetime White House aide denied that he pressured Don B. Reynolds into buying the time on the Johnson family television station in Austin. Texas GALVESTON—Negotiators in the West Gulf Coast dock strike Wednesday started putting on paper the tentative agreements they have reached by talking. Shippers and International Longshoremen’s Association bargainers have tentatively come to terms on all major issues in the West Gulf District, according to Assistant U. S. Labor Secretary James J. Reynolds. AUSTIN—The student body president of the University of Texas spoke Tuesday night of teen age revolutionaries—garbed in button-down shirts and ivy league pants—but able to make intelligent decisions in a voting booth. The senior law student was one of four university students, and the only non-teenager, who urged the House Constitutional Amendments Committee to approve a proposal lowering the voting age to 18. ★ ★ ★ AUSTIN—The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted Wednesday an indefinite postponement of its hearing of Jack Ruby’s appeal of his death sentence for slaying presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. The high court said submission of Ruby’s appeal and a decision on which attorneys will be recognized as his counsel should wait until Trial Judge Joe Brown of Dallas decides whether Ruby is now sane or insane. Lineup for the 14th annual Intercollegiate Talent Show will include 11 acts from colleges throughout the Southwest area, Talent Committee Chairman Richard Conner has announced. The show will kick off Military Weekend activities March 5, at 6:30 p.m. in G. Rollie White Coli seum. Gary Gosney, a junior pre-veterinary medicine major from Fort Worth, will serve as emcee while Bob Boone and the Aggieland Orchestra will provide the background music. Forming the chorus line for the show’s opening and closing num bers will be the famed Kilgore Rangerettes, returning after sev eral previous appearances at the event. Other acts include Annette Bogue from Stephen F. Austin State College in Nacogdoches, who will present a comic skit of a little girl; The Riverside Sing ers, folk singers from Arkansas State Teachers College; The Randy Bell Trio, a jazz combo from the University of Arkansas, and Just III, a folk singing trio from Louisiana State University. Millie Carr, a popular singer; Manuel Melendez, a vocalist; Linda Lepard, a singer and dancer, and The Folk Four, a novelty singing group, all from Eastern New Mexico State Uni versity, will also be presented. The Loyola Stampers, a six- man combo and comedy team, and Jeanette Theriot, a light classical singer, both from Loyola Uni versity of New Orleans, and Wanda Norgress, an LSU pianist, will also perform. Rounding out the program will be The Coachmen, winners of the Aggie Talent Show recently. Talent for the show was chosen from 100 persons or groups audi tioned at colleges and universities Clergyman Favors Low Drinking Age TOWACO, N. J. ) _ An Epis copal clergyman has suggested that New Jersey lower its legal drink ing age from 21 to 16 to take al cohol out of the “forbidden fruit” category for teen-agers. “If the drinking age were low enough, high school kids would soon come to regard alcohol as another pizza pie,” said the Rev. Joseph D. Herring, vicar of the Episcopal Church of the Trans figuration in this northern Jersey community. His proposal comes in the midst of a new campaign by New Jersey to get neighboring New York State to raise its limit from 18 to 21. New Jersey officials contend many of the state’s teen-agers cross the state line to New York to drink, and often become involved in traf fic accidents. in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana and New Mexico by the talent committee. Originally sponsored by the Music Committee of the Memo rial Student Center Council, the inaugural talent show was held before a capacity crowd in the MSC Ballroom, March 7, 1952, and included 13 acts from five Texas schools. Last year’s attrac tion featured 11 acts from 12 colleges. Tickets are on sale in the Stu dent Programs Office of the MSC. They will be sold Monday and Tuesday in the mess halls, and a booth will be set up in the MSC post office two days before the show. i Direct Combat I 1 In Viet Nam I Is U.S. Policy I WASHINGTON 69?) — A direct American combat role in South Viet Nam emerged officially Wed nesday as within President John son’s newly proclaimed policy of “continuing action” against Red at tacks. At the same time, U. S. offi cials listed as conditions for Viet Nam peace negotiations: 1. an end to the attacks by the Com munist Viet Cong and 2. a halt in the subversian, infiltration and; supply of the guerrillas from the outside. With the guerrilla assaults con tinuing, and Red Chinese Primier Chou En-lai calling Wednesday for complete, immediate and uncondi tional U. S. withdrawal as the price of negitiations, Johnson was re ported cool on the prospect for peace talks at this time. France, the Soviet Union, Bri tain, and U. N. Secretary General U Thant maneuvered _ behind the scenes to get negotiations under way. But Peking and Hanoi were reported adamant, and U.S. policy appeared to be to press ahead to improve the military situation and its bargaining strength if negoti ations do come later. Late in the day, White House press secretary George E. Reedy told newsmen that there are no “meaningful proposals” before the U. S. government. “The White House is not en gaged in any negotiations for a Viet Nam settlement,” he said, and added that no one has been authorized to negotiate on be half of the United States. First word of the broader U. S. military role in South Viet Nam came with a Saigon announcement that American-manned jet bomb ers had struck against Viet Cong positions in central Viet Nam last Thursday and several times since then. Previously, the 24,000 U. S. military personnel in South Viet Nam were supposed co be acting as ‘advisers.” While the Ameri cans avowedly shot back in self- defense, direct combat was sup posed to be the function of the South Vietnamese forces. The situation was different out side of South Viet Nam. Late last spring American fliers be gan missions over neighboring Laos, and hit North Vietnamese targets following the August at tacks on U. S. warships in the Gulf of Tonkin. The scope of the U. S. action broadened early this month with the reprisal air raids on North Viet Nam, triggered by Viet Cong killings of Americans in South Viet Nam. Then last week John son said “our continuing actions” will be “measured and fitting and adequate” to meet “the continuing aggression of others.” Rotary Foundation To Offer Grants For Top Scholars Applications for Rotary Founda tion Fellowships for graduate stu dy abroad in 1966-67 must be filed not later than April 15. Program details are available from Graduate Dean Wayne C. Hall. Rotary Foundation Fellows have dual roles as scholars and ambas sadors of good will. They may study in any country in which there are Rotary Clubs, and there are clubs in most free countries of the world. The stipends include basically all travel, study and living ex penses for the year of graduate study abroad. Hall said the qualifications re quire an applicant to have a friend ly personality and ability to speak in public, so as to enable him to make effective contacts abroad and at home; have high scholastic ability and hold a bachelor’s de gree or its equivalent by the time the Fellowship is to begin; be able to read, write and speak the language of the country in which he is to study; have an interest in world affairs; be a male between the ages of 20 and 28, inclusive, and be single; and be a citizen of the country of his permanent resi dence.