Bulletin Board THURSDAY Abilene Hometown Club will Mt Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Eoom 206 of the Academic Build ing. Bay Area Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 108 of the Academic Build ing. Aggie football films will be shown. Bellaire Hometown Club Will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m, in the Cashion Room of the YMCA. Party tickets will be given out. Biology Graduate Wives Club will have a rummage sale Satur- Jay behind Orr’s downtown at 8:30 a.m. Brazoria County Hometown Club will meet Thursday in Room 225 of the Academic Building at 7:30 p.m. Corpus Christi Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 205 of the Academic Building. Dallas Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 in Room 2-C of the Memorial Student Center. Deep East Texas Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p,m. in the Legget Hall Lounge. El Paso Hometown Club will meet Thursday after Yell Prac tice in Room 2-B of the MSC. Rides will be arranged for Thanksgiving. Fort Worth Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3-C of the MSC. Galveston. Island Hometown Club will meet Thursday after Yell Practice in Room 3-C of the MSC. Houston Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Main Desk of the MSC. The Club picture will be taken. Class A uniform or sports coats should be worn. Laredo Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Fountain Room of the YMCA. The club picture will be taken. Mason - McCulloch County Hometown Club will meet Thurs day at 7:30 p.m. in the Reading Room of the YMCA. Rio Grande Valley Hometown Club will meet Thnrsday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 204 of the Academic Building. Plans for the Christ mas Party in Mexico will be made. San Angelo-West Texas Home town Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the MSC. Semper Fidelis Society will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 104 of the Biology Build ing. South Louisiana Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 106 of the Academic Building. Texarkana Area Hometown Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m., in Room 203 of the Academic Building. Waco-McLennan County Home town Club will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Anderson Room of the YMCA. Wichita Falls Hometown Club "'ill meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Bio-Sciences Building. Whooping Cranes Arrive At Aransas WASHINGTON ) _ Thirty- eight whooping cranes have ar rived at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge on the Texas coast, their winter home. The Interior Department re ceived a report that three more adult whoopers had been spotted on a lake west of Panhandle, Tex. The birds — 31 adults and 7 young — were counted in an aeri al survey Tuesday. A record 42 cranes left the Texas refuge last spring for nesting grounds in Northern Canada. AIR FORCE PHYSICALS Ralph Stevener of Bryan gets his eyes dilated for visual tests administered with Air Force physicals being given sophomores at Texas A&M. Staff Sergeant Darold Meyer from Carswell Air Force Base gives the tests. Stevener is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Stevener who lives in the Tabor community. News Analysis Peking Attacks Moscow Again By WILLIAM L. RYAN CP) Special Correspondent The latest propaganda salvos exchanged by Moscow and Pek ing suggest that Red China, dis mayed by the mauling inflicted on Viet Nam Communists, fears that without significant help, the tide may have turned against the Red cause. This would explain the boiling anger in new Chinese attacks on Moscow which already may have brought the dispute between the two Communist giants be yond a point of no return. Moscow, its patience with Pek ing close to the cracking point, claimed this week that it sought “unity of action” on Viet Nam and that Peking spumed it. The article in the Soviet Communist party paper Pravda did not ex plain what it meant by “unity of action,” but there have been hints. What Moscow wanted, accord ing to sources who should know, was a “Communist summit” meet ing on Viet Nam to coordinate world Communist policy. Pek ing would have no part of it. Evidently the Russians argued that some sort of settlement in Viet Nam might in the long run benefit world communism. Peking saw this as back-stage plotting to accommodate the Americans and end the fighting. China may see Viet Nam — and Southeast Asia — slipping from its grasp. Victory for the Americans might be far off, but for the Communist side winning is becoming a dimmer prospect all the time, barring more pow erful outside help. Prudently, the Chinese have not wanted to provide this help on their own and leave them selves vulnerable to the conse quences, but there is a sound of desperation in their propaganda which indicates they may even now be thinking in terms of “volunteers” in the style of Ko rea. Up to now, the Soviet Union has given North Viet Nam “de fense” aid. In effect, China says this is a poor way to run a world revolution. In a long article hailing the 48th anniversary of the Bolshe vik Revolution, People’s Daily of Peking said the October revo lution pointed the only road to Communist triumph and all must follow it. “The road of the October rev olution was the road of revolu tion by violence. Seizure of po litical power by armed force is the central task and highest form of revolution. This is a univer sal law,” it said. Sophomores Undergo Physicals Sophomores are being thump ed, spun and sent through all manner of contraptions at Tex as A&M this week. But it isn’t a form of hazing. Around 265 cadets are under going physicals at the Universi ty Hospital. An Air Force de tachment of 13 from Bergstrom and Carswell Bases are giving examinations. Among sophomores who hope to enter A&M’s professional of ficers course is Ralph Stevener of Bryan. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Stevener of Tabor community is majoring in agri cultural engineering. Stevener is scholastic corporal of Squadron 13 and has a 2.0 grade point ratio. He is a grad uate of Stephen F. Austin High School in Bryan where he was active in FFA work. Physicals given by Air Force personnel under command of Lt. Col. Robert H. Frey is one of a series of requirements freshmen and sophomores in aerospace studies must pass in order to en ter the officers course. Students must have a GPR of 1.1, pass an Air Force Officer Qualifications Test and physical to go into contract and studies that lead to a commission in the Air Force. Earle Authors National Article Dr. James H. Earle, associate professor of engineering graphics at Texas A&M, is the author of an article in Graphic Science, a national publication. “Industrial Consultation for Graphics Instruction” stresses the need for close relationships with industry to maintain up-to- date course offerings in engi neering graphics. Got Yourself A College Girl? Need A Gift That’s Different? Typically Aggie? See Our Dorm Loungers For The Gals (They’re Seen At The Best Schools) At SHAFFER’S-Where The Action (this month) Is Our Famous RECORD SALE SHAFFER'S UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE North Gate, College Station 8:30 to 5:30 Daily THE BATTALION Thursday, November 18, UHiS College Station, Texas Page 7 Moon May Contain Water, Diamonds By RALPH DIGHTON AP Science Writer LA JOLLA, Calif. UP) — A scientist says the moon, general ly believed to be a dry and bar ren chunk of rock, may have wa ter and diamonds in its crust. Nobel Prize-winning chemist Harold C. Prey told science writ ers Tuesday that the heat and pressure he believes created the moon from space gas and dust also would have formed diamonds on or near its surface. The same theory of the moon’s origin leads to the possibility that water, condensed from gases, may lie beneath the moon’s sur face. Upward seepage of this water. Dr. Urey said, may explain the broad flat plains on the moon which resemble dried-up ocean beds. Ancient astronomers thought the plains were large bodies of water and called them maria, the Latin word for seas. Dr. Urey won the 1934 Nobel Prize for discovering deuterium. an element of the hydrogen bomb. He said some of the craters on the moon’s surface may not be volcanoes, but the openings of tubes through which water has gushed to the surface. Urey spoke at the third an nual briefing on new frontiers of science. AGGIE BONFIRE SPECIAL! J- ' '■'Ki ',.v jv SAFETY MODEL SINGLE AXE SVz LB. POPULAR MICHIGAN PATTERN POLISHED BLADE SELECTED HARDWOOD HANDLE AMERICAN MADE-FIRST QUALITY $5.95 VALUE $3.66 OPEN 9 A. M. - 9 P. M. MON. - SAT. “WHERE YOU ALWAYS BUY THE BEST FOR LESS” GaiBSON’S REDMOND TERRACE SHOPPING CENTER 1420 HIGHWAY 6 S. COLLEGE STATION How to make a holiday last all year long "How often do you coll Long Distance to friends or members of the family?" "Well, I expect to make some calls on Thanksgiving and maybe on Christmas." "Why wait for a holiday or special occasion to call — that's the old fashioned way!" "How come? Is the phone company having a sale just now?" "No, not that. New low-cost long distance rates are now in effect all day Sunday and every night after eight — so now for a dollar or less, you can keep in touch more often." "Say! That's a good idea! Tonight I'll make some important calls I've been putting off." "Fine! Thanks to new low rates, you can call anywhere in continental U. S.* station-to-station and talk three minutes for $1.00 or less. This is the big communications bargain — the modern way to keep in touch at all times." * Except Alaska. SOUTHWESTERN STATES TELEPHONE C0.W A member of the General System