News Analysis Communists Still Strong In America Che Battalion Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1965 Number 234 Student Senate Discusses Political Clubs Thursday ... ^ - i J Resolution To Ask Change In Policy The long-simmering feud over political clubs at Texas A&M erupts into the open Thursday when the Student Senate will consider a resolution urging that political clubs be allowed to operate on campus. The resolution, to be submitted by Craig Buck, will ask the Board of Directors to permit clubs to meet on campus, recruit members and solicit funds from members of the student body. Buck will moderate a discussion reviewing both sides of the controversial issue. HHHHHHHHi ■ ARCHITECT STUDENTS PLAN URBAN RENEWAL Texas A&M’s third-year architect student constructed, as a term project, a model to be used by the Plano Central Business Devel opment for urban renewal. The Plano group awarded the School of Architecture $1,000 to work on a plan for their city. Pictured around the model are, left to right. Bob Brill, Don Rapp, Don Teddlie, C. J. Prashaw, Plano businessman, Elmo Drume, Plano city manager, Dennis Walo, Romeo Garcia, Craig Noonan and Chartier Newton, group advisor. Kennedy Stoned By Chile Students California Dress Designers Create More Skin Fashions CONCEPCION, Chile WP) — Angry leftist students spat on U. S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., and threw eggs, rocks and money at him when he vis ited the University of Chile Tuesday. He had been warned by student leaders to stay away. Although the senator appar ently was not hit by the eggs or stones, spittle fell on his fore head and clothes. Later, this group remained in front of the gym and when the leftist students approached they clashed with stones and clubs. Kennedy had been warned not to go to the university but after consulting with his advisers he decided to go. During the afternoon the sen ator met informally with the uni versity student leaders. off-campus political activ ities will support the resolu tion, while Dean of Students James P. Hannigan will ex plain the administration’s policy. The question of political clubs on campus was initiated by the Issues Committee of the Senate last week. “Certain members of the com mittee felt it was time to end the administration’s double standard,” said Mike Reynolds, chairman of the committee. The political club issue has lain dormant since last fall, when the nonpartisan Committee for Politi cal Rights on Campus staged a demonstration in front of the Academic Building protesting the administration's policy in banning clubs on campus. The committee asked for the right “to publicly support with out fear of incrimination from the administration . . . political candidates, political clubs or any other controversial issues which affect the nation, state or student body.” Political clubs are barred from campus under interpretation of House Bill 86, Article 5, Section 2, which was passed by the 58th State Legislature. That section states “none of the money appropriated by . . . this act, regardless of their source or character, shall be used for in fluencing the outcome of any election or the passage or defeat of any legislative measure.” Administrative order 3 of the A&M University System says that “no property under the con trol of the Texas A&M System will be used for political cam paigns, meetings, speeches or in the furtherance of any political campaign nor used in any way for any political office.” Fallout Plays To Open Friday Night “Forgive Me My Trespasses” and “A Good Woman” open Fall out Theater Productions at Tex as A&M at 7:30 p.m. Friday. The one-act plays go on stage in the basement of Guion Hall. Classified as a fallout shelter, the basement was converted for “lab” productions by the Aggie Play ers. Fallout productions fulfill a requirement for students tak ing C. K. Esten’s “techniques of directing” theater arts course. “Forgive Me My Trespasses” is written and directed by Hol- lynn Fuller, sophomore English major from El Paso. The cast includes Jim Pye as Jim Winters, Jan Gannaway as Mollie Simp son Winters, the young man's wife, and Jim Baldauf as Old Peters. Bob Spivey will manage the stage. “A Good Woman,” by Arnold Bennett, is directed by Roger Williams. He studies education and is a junior from Alexandria, Va. Frances Flynn will depict Rosamund, Bob Hipp plays James and John Gray is cast as Gerald. Lighting for both plays is under Cynthia Smith’s super vision. The third play originally scheduled Friday, “The Juror,” was cancelled. The program will include a musical interlude, the performing group to be an nounced. Fallout Theater admission is 50 cents per person. Flying Cowman Duffy Duller Instructs Future Aggie Pilots By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON <^ > )—It’s more than just a wild and woolly time. It’s a hodge-podge, left and right. “Real squares. Old ladies up in the Bronx.” That’s what some young radi cals today call members of the American Communist party. The weekly newspaper, the National Observer, which quoted them, said they are equally contempt uous of liberals and labor unions. But Monday the party thought it got a shot in the arm and talked of running candidates for office. But George Lincoln Rock well, commander of the Ameri can Nazi party, has already said he will run for president in 1972. The Ku Klux Klan is in busi ness. The ultraconservative Min- utemen talk of their secret “un derground army.” Robert Welch, founder of the right-wing John Birch Society, says of the United States: “It’s ‘one vast insane asylum’ where 'they’ve let out the worst pa tients to run the place’.” The Communist party has splinter groups. Even the Re publican party has splinters. But long after thousands of today’s young radicals sag into middle age, raising families and buying homes between trips to the bank, the Communist party will probably be still here. At least it has an ideology, al though it changes with the wind, while many and probably most of Company G-l Wins At Houston Parade Company G-l placed first in the Houston Corps Trip parade with 910 points. In second place was Company C-l with 893 points followed by Squadron 1 with 892 points. Companies E-l and A-2 held 4th and 5th places with 888 and 886 points respectively. The Aggie Band still leads the marching competition with 4,324 points. Company C-2 and Squad ron 12 are still in second and third places with 4,267 and 4,425 points respectively. Company G-l replaced Company F-2 in fourth place having compiled 4,240 points. The band now has a 57-point lead over Company C-2. Its lead last week was only 49 points even though it placed higher in the last weeks march-in than it did in the Houston parade. BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. )_ Plenty of skin will be showing at the nation’s resorts next year if California designers have any thing to say about it. Midriffs, bare from bust to be low the navel, peekaboo lace, cut out sleeves and transparent blouses worn over bare bosoms Was the look at the opening of the California fashion creators’ spring and resort press preview Tuesday. The bare midriff firmly estab lished itself in the Geno of Cali fornia collection. One short- cropped top cascaded over the Computer Confab In Humanities Set A conference on computer re search in the humanities will be held at Texas A&M Dec. 3, Dr. Lee Martin of the English de partment announced. Seventy-five to 100 persons from 15 state colleges and uni versities are expected for the conference. “This conference is preparatory to establishing a program in computer research in humanities »t A&M,” Martin said. “The on ly other similar center in the L’nited States is at New York University.” Speakers for the one-day con ference at the Ramada Inn will he Dr. W. A. Sedelow, head of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at St. Louis Uni versity; his wife, Sally Y. Sede- W, of the English Department; L. C. Hubbard, branch manager °f IBM in Dallas, and Phillip h’ettleton of IBM in Beaumont. the young radicals have only up set emotions and incoherence. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover considers the Communist party a “Moscow-controlled” menace and part of an international Com munist conspiracy. He called Gus Hall, the party’s chief spokes man, “Moscow-trained.” It was Hall who Monday, after a Supreme Court decision, got the idea that now the party could run candidates, although its claimed membership has dropped from perhaps 100,000 in the 1930s to 10,000 now. The court held unconstitution al a provision requiring a party member to register as such with the federal government. This was the reasoning: For failure to register he could be prosecuted and jailed. But if he did register, he could be prose cuted under another law which makes it a crime to belong to a group that advocates overthrow ing the government. Thus, if he registered, he would be risking incriminating himself under the other law. The court pointed out that un der the Constitution’s Fifth Amendment a man can’t be com pelled to incriminate himself. In the 1930s — although the Communist party’s part in it was very small — the great do mestic crusade was to organize workers into unions. They joined in the millions. Earlier this month, in a spe cial story on the radical left among the young, the New York Times, picking out the Students for a Democratic Society as the “largest single radical student group on or around campuses,” said that the SDS had “pretty much given up the working class as lost, having fallen prey to the union and the Democratic party.” The Times says SDS claims 3,000 members, with 90 chapters around the country. The National Observer, not limiting itself to student groups, said the new left places less em phasis on economic problems, more on “human freedom,” and only a few splinter groups try to “out-Mao Mao Tze-tung.” Yet, the newspaper went on, “even a tiny splinter group pos sesses the capacity for mischief if it also possesses dynamite.” Some groups are on a crusade against poverty and the war in Viet Nam. FBI’s Hoover says “the Com munist party is today expending tremendous energy attempting to increase its influence among col lege students.” bust line in a loop of fabric cov ering a nude like bra. An at-home outfit in polka dots had no middle and a wrap around patio skirt that left the hip bones bare. New fabrics turned up every where. Campus casuals took bathroom toweling, complete with fringe, and fashioned full-skirted, empire waist patio dress, bikini style playsuit with matching beach jacket and a shift. Its designers also combined printed voile tops wtih matching printed canvas skirts and slacks. They used old-fashioned cotton curtain lace for a group of over blouse dresses and the long sleeves of a linen shift. One-piece playsuits turned up in all collections. Slacks were either plastered to the skin and flowing into bell bottoms or perfectly straight and somewhat wider than last year’s. The most seductive clothes were in the at-home outfits. Alex Coleman showed wide, flowing, harem trousers in vibrant prints. Chemistry Wives Plan Thanksgiving Dinner The Chemistry Graduate Stu dents Wives Club will sponsor a Thanksgiving Specialty Dinner at 7 p.m. Friday in the South Solarium of the YMCA. Couples are asked to please bring a large dish. Single stu dents will be charged 75 cents. For reservations call Barbara Russell at 846-7050 or contact Roger Williams at room 313 of the Chemistry Building. Reserva tions must be made by Wednes day. A group of about 100 universi ty students, identified as pro- Communist, were among thou sands that attended the meeting. They sang the national an thems of Cuba and Chile and screamed “assassin,” and “Yan kee, go home” at the senator, who is on a Latin-American tour. Kennedy remained calm and waited 20 minutes for the stu dents to quiet down. When he started to speak his voice again was drowned out. He asked if some of the stu dents wished to come forward and discuss matters with him but leftists shouted back that Ken nedy should come toward them. Kennedy started toward them and as he approached some tried to kick him, others spit at him and still others burned a U. S. flag in a corner of the gymna sium where the meeting was held. In the few minutes that Ken nedy tried to speak, he told the students the United States looks with sympathy toward the social and economic reforms being ap plied in Chile. He also told them the United States is led by hu man beings and, because of this, errors will be made, but the er rors will not be solved by throw ing eggs. Other students tried to quiet the leftists and some ran to ward the center of the gym and challenged the leftists to fight. As the tense situation con tinued, Kennedy left the gym, surounded by aides and news men who sought to protect him. Outside the building, some anti-Communist students ap proached his wife, Ethel, and told her, “Senora, please forgive us for this shameful situation.” A cowman who has logged nearly 19,000 hours flying and holds valid pilot ratings from China, Saudi Arabia and Laos instructs in the Texas A&M ROTC flight program. Howard L. “Duffy” Buller is one of four Texas Airmotive in structors helping fledgling Army and Air Force pilots get their first feel of the clouds. Circling Easterwood Airport with a neophyte pilot at the con trols is tame stuff for Buller, though. His 18,700 hours airborne in everything from an Army Air Corps trainer to the latest jet job flown by Eastern Air Lines has let him do it all. The 52- year-old Bryanite chauffered King Hussain to Jordan one aft ernoon and saw the Arab mon arch, tip the Jordanian black bag containing $60,000 in gold. Buller was a flying firefighter while ranching in Oregon, log ging time in two-engine trans ports equipped to dump four tanks of pancake batter-type ex tinguisher on forest fires. Buller, who piloted the first mail pouch into New York’s La- Guardia Airport, came to A&M last summer to study animal husbandry under Dr. O. D. But ler, head of the Department of Animal Science. Buller followed Butler’s precepts in breeding and Ag Talent Show Auditions for the Aggie Talent Show will continue Wednesday and Thursday in Room 119 of G. Rollie White Coliseum. Shows may be scheduled in the Student Program Of fice of the Memorial Student Center. The best three acts will re ceive cash prizes of $25, $15, and $10 respectively and the first place winner will repre sent A&M in the Intercol legiate Talent Show next spring. raising a prize-winning steer on his Oregon ranch. Buller wanted to get into theory. But the 1935 graduate of Stan ford with a degree in economics had too much high-octane fuel for his years. Buller located with Texas Airmotive as ground, then flight instructor, sold the ranch and bought a home in Bryan. Buller and his wife, Delocia, re side at 1618 Nall Lane. One son, Charles 14, is a student at San Marcos Academy. The route from Oregon to A&M was a circuitous one, though. Flying with Eastern in 1937, Duffy was assigned as co pilot to Col. Joe Duckworth, com manding officer of old Bryan Field when it was the Army in strument school in Texas. “Colonel Duckworth was the grandaddy of all instrument fly ing,” Buller vouched. With Eastern and rubbing flight boards with Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, Buller flew the first ail mail to LaGuardia. The pouch was designated for an other plane, but Buller’s DC2 was loaded and on April 2, 1940, he made the historic flight. From Eastern Buller went to the China National Aviation Corp. in 1946. Two years later, he left Shanghai two days be fore the Communist takeover of China. Then the Aggie ROTC instructor ranched, flew produc tion test planes for Convair in California, airlifted to Tokyo, flew a TWA contract in Saudi Arabia and then in Laos. Buller’s mother was full-blood Norwegian, and there’s little doubt he inherited the Viking wanderlust. Currently, his ship is in port at Texas A&M. PRE-FLIGHT CHECK Howard L. (Duffy) Buller and Texas A&M senior flight student Jack Bratton of Fort Worth check the engine of a Cessna 172 preparatory to a lesson in the air. Buller, vet eran air transport pilot with 18,700 flying hours, is an in structor in the ROTC flight program at A&M. Bratton is the commanding officer of Squadron 10.