• Columns • Editorials • News Briefs Cbe Battalion Page 2 College Station, Texas Friday, January 7, 1966 • Opinions • Cartoons Features CADET SLOUCH by Jim Ekirle Lani Presswood 1 think th’ lem ” time has come for us to face a certain prob- Chinese Students Favor American Viet Nam Action By JOE LEMMING Battalion Staff Writer During the Christmas holidays, Americans briefly attempted to forget the all too realistic prob lems of the Vietnamese war, and the cancerous rise of “peace” demonstrators in several Ameri can colleges. Like stones dropped into a pool of calm water, the ripples of these dilemmas are felt abroad, and other nations judge the United States by her overseas actions. What are the opinions being formed about United States policy ? Many Americans wonder. As an attempt at answering a portion of this question, four Chinese graduate students at A&M were asked their views on the difficult issues. Because of their Asiatic origin, their opinion of Viet Nam and communism are significant. Also, all four served as officers in the Nationalist Chinese Army, and are familiar with military opera tions. The four students were first asked if they thought America was justified in stepping into Viet Nam. “The Communists want to con trol the world, so Americans must fight. If the United States does not, she will give up Thailand and Malaysia, and finally the Ameri can territory itself,” commented Fa-Chung Wang, 26, Department of Physics. The four agreed the United States should bei n Viet Nam, but Education Tax Relief: Long - Overdue Plan said Viet Nam was only a front, and the real heart of the problem comes from Red China. “The keypoint is Red China,” said Robert Chen, 26, Department of Civil Engineering. “If the United States really wants to win, they must fight Red China directly.” “The United States cannot de feat the Viet Cong by bombing Hanoi, because Red China is sup porting the North Vietnamese,” adds W. S. Chang, 26, Depart ment of Civil Engineering. Ming Hung You, 30, Depart ment of Genetics, claims the Viet Cong propaganda program tells the Vietnamese peoplet o dislike the democratic South Vietnamese, because the Southerners are sup posedly helping the Americans colonize Viet Nam, as the French did once before. “I believe the Americans should launch a stronger offensive in the war, for if the United States doesn’t the war will go on for a long time,” You said. All were in agreement about demonstrations staged at certain American colleges. “The college students believe in what they are doing, but they don’t understand the true situ ation,” Chen pointed out. “Their actions are understand able,” Wang asserted, “because nobody likes fighting at the risk of their own life. Other people should explain to them that it is necessary to America’s freedom that they fight.” Now that the Christmas holi days have come and gone, can mid-term be far behind ? The annual arrival of mid term heralds good tidings for most, because a five-month bur den has bee lifted and a new line up of courses and profs can be anticipated. But the semester break is also a time of concern for many of those who face the prospect of shelling out at registration for the next four months of academic life. Every student handles this economic problem a little bit differently but a majority de pend on some amount of help from their parents. In many cases this help is the deciding factor in whether a col legian can stay in the school of his choice. Parents of college students often encounter a real financial squeeze for their efforts but help may at last be on the way. Connecticut Senator Abraham Ribicoff plans to push for a “tuition tax credit” bill when Congress reconvenes later in the month. He started the legisla tive wheels moving on his bill last year and should stand a good chance of success this time around . If you plan to fire off any letters to your congressman this session you could do worse than pick this particular bill to sup port. In the form the bill took last year, tax credit is given the par ent for the first $1,500 he pays annually for tuition, fees, books and supplies per college student. The actual amount of the credit breaks down like this: 75 per cent of the first $200, 25 per cent of the next $300, and 10 per cent of the next $1,000. Maximum credit allowed a parent is $325 per year. This is not just a tax de duction now, this $325 is cold cash which is subtracted from the amount of income taxes the parent owes. In other words, if the parent had to pay $1,000 in income taxes but was eligible for the maximum tuition tax bene fit, he would only pay $675. The bill would apply not only to parents but to any individual who contributed part of his in come to help a college student defray necessary expenses. Sixty-two per cent of the dol lar relief would go to families in the $3,000-$10,000 income bracket, with 91 per cent of the benefit going to families with annual incomes under $20,000. This proposal seems to be a sensible, equitable long-overdue plan to benefit American higher education and those seeking it. There is only one apparent ques tion dissenters could raise—how much would such a program cost the federal government ? At the Movies wzf/i Lani Presswood One word best describes “The Knack.” Well, make it two words. Far out. This British comedy, the cur rent offering at the Campus Theater, captured first prize honors at the 1965 Cannes Film Festival. It’s offbeat, kooky, and zesty. And also good in a strange sort of way. Director Richard Lester has put together a refreshing, origi nal, avant-garde film which has its moments but also its let downs. Lester, who earlier gave the world “Help” and ‘Hard Day’s Night,” throws out Robert’s Rules of Order completely this time. He employs such devices as subtitles, Keystone cop-type chases, sudden scene shifts, back ward action, and speeded-up se quences. The “knack,” as you have al ready guessed, is the ability to woo and win women. Rita (“Taste of Honey”) Tushingham becomes the target of a couple of roommates, one with the knack and the other without. A tight-fitting suit, long hair, and a calm nerveless air of de tachment mark the former, a guy who just calls himself Ton- del. Tondel’s prowess at attract ing the opposite sex is really something else. He spends most of his time leading buxom British lasses in to his room “to listen to rec ords,” motorboating out to an island pulling three lady water- skiers, or donning a pair of sun glasses and motorcycling off to who knows where with an at tractive traveling companion. Collin, who owns the house Tondel rooms in, cuts a far dif ferent figure. He’s a tall, lanky, uncoordinated schoolteacher who spends a good deal of the show trying to find out just what the knack is. One more madcap, a nutty Irishman named Tom, rounds out the four characters who domi nate the movie. Tom is really the farthest out of the group. His most noticeable trait is an obsession to paint everything a light color. Browns especially, Tom doesn’t go for browns at all. These four race through what is either a very deep or very shallow plot and I’m inclined to go along with the latter. The quality of this movie doesn’t come to be found in the complete whole, but rather in several in dividual scenes which sparkle briefly but brilliantly. One is the chase episode, which finds Tom and Collin running frantically after the other two, who are speeding away on a motorcycle. The two pursuers are determined to rescue the un suspecting country girl from the seusous clutches of the guy with the knack. Another memorable interlude has the girl’s vocabulary dwind ling to one word—‘rape’—and she keeps repeating it, with different levels of volume and inflection. Natually, every time she says it out in public the three guys cringe and pretend to be thor oughly absorbed in say, picking up leaves off the grass. To give you some idea of how far out “The Knack” really is, it makes “What’s New, Pussy cat?” seem like an orderly, or dinary, orthodox show. Yet beneath this kaleidoscope of offbeat antics runs a unifying undercurrent, a suitably subtle message which says ‘viva youth’ and ’viva life’ and then equates the two. Another equation is that fun ny scenes equal an enjoyable movie, and “The Knack” does contain enough high spots to place it in that category. Cost of the measure to the Treasury has been estimated at $750 million for the first year, rising to $1.25 billion by the fifth year. This figure of $750 mil lion represents only 9 per cent of what Washington outlayed for higher education back in 1962. In 10 years, some observers pre dict the government will be spending over $20 billion annual ly to finance higher education. You can’t put a definite price tag on what higher education is worth to America, or any other country. But it is upon educa tion that we have rested our hopes for the future of man kind. The cost of higher education will continue to accelerate as College Students Favor Republicans While the large majority of U. S. college students and their faculty agree that President Lyn don B. Johnson will be re-elected to a second term, the students favor a Republican candidate. This is the finding of the Playboy College Opinion Survey—covering 200 campuses, including Texas A&M—conducted one week after the election of John V. Lindsay as mayor of New York City. The survey shows a majority of the students—55 per cent—would vote for a Republican candidate in 1968. On the other hand, 66 per cent of the faculty would prefer a Democratic candidate. Despite their preference, how ever, 91 per cent of the students believe that a Democratic candi date will win the election. Eighty- six per cent concede the election to Mr. Johnson while 5 per cent think Sen. Robert Kennedy of New York might win. Among the faculty polled, 95 per cent believe that the Demo cratic party will again be vic torious, and only 1 per cent of these believe it will be someone other than Johnson. The Playboy College Opinion Survey also asked “Since Ameri can males are eligible for the draft at the age of 18 and are serving their country, should the legal voting age be lowered to 18 years in all states?” Only 55 per cent of both the students and faculty agreed this should become law. The principal reason offered by the survey’s respondents against the lowering of the voting age was that intellectual matur ity is more important than phys- iscal maturity. Of those students who chose Republican candidates, 11 per cent cast their ballots for Barry Gold- water, 10 per cent for New York Mayor Lindsay, 9 per cent for Gov. William Scranton of Penn sylvania, 8 per cent for Michigan Governor George Romney, 8 per cent for former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, 4 per cent for Gov. Mark Hatfield of Oregon and 4 per cent for Gov. Nelson Rocke feller of New York. Among the students who prefer the Democratic party in 1968, 29 per cent chose Mr. Johnson as their favorite candidate; 12 per cent. Sen. Kennedy; 2 per cent. Vice President Hubert H. Hum phrey, and 1 per cent, Gov. George Wallace of Alabama. Among faculty members who prefer a Democratic candidate, 48 per cent selected Mr. Johnson as their favorite; 9 per cent, Mr. Humphrey; and 6 per cent. Sen. Kennedy. Nine per cent of the Republi can - oriented faculty members chose Gov. Romney; 7 per cent. Gov. Scranton; 6 per cent, Gold- water; 5 per cent, Nixon; 4 per cent, Lindsay; 1 per cent, Gov. Hatfield; and 1 per cent, Gov. Rockefeller. Of the 9 per cent of students Sen. Yarborough Reviews Congress’ Major Actions, Predicts Bright Future enrollment increases and opera ting expenses mount higher and higher. Both private and state- supported schools are being forced to hike their tuition rates and fees to keep up with the spiraling cost of providing a quality college education. Federal aid to education is a valuable contribution and it will become even more so in the future. But the proposed tui tion tax credit bill helps serve the same purpose and does it without the waste and ineffi ciency of benefits channeled down through the tunnel of bureau cracy. Senator Ribicoff’s bill, if passed, will be an encouraging important step, but hopefully it will only be a first one. By SEN. RALPH YARBOROUGH As we turn the Calendar to a New Year, millions of Texans will have a brighter future as a result of the many major laws which we passed during the first session of the 89th Congress. The prospects of the New Year are filled with hope and prosperity as we look back on 1965 as a year of progress for the United States and the American people. As we begin the second session of the 89th Congress in Janu ary, the following are among the millions of Americans whose lives will be changed by the new federal legislation: SCHOOL CHILDREN will have better educations because of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act. COLLEGE STUDENTS will have better opportunities through the Higher Education and the extended National Defense Education Act. be better rehabilitated because HANDICAPPED persons will of the Vocational Rehabilitation Act. UNSKILLED WORKERS can be re-employed with new job qualifications under the expanded Manpower Development and Training Act. SMALL BUSINESSMEN will benefit from increases to the Small Business Administration’s loan fund. ) CONSUMERS will all have more money in their pockets from the Excise Tax Reduction Bill. RESIDENTS OF DEPRESSED AREAS will have new hopes of prospex-ity under the Public Works and Economic Development Act. J] VOCATIONAL STUDENTS can get loans under the Vocational Education Act. who believe a Republican candi date might emerge victorious, Governors Romney and Scranton, Goldwater and Lindsay each are conceded a 2 per cent chance. Two per cent of the faculty thought Nixon might be a win ning candidate, while 1 per cent said Gov. Romney had a chance. The survey determined that 76 per cent of the student respon dents will be eligible to vote for the first time in the next Presi dential election. It is significant to note that 98 per cent of all those eligible students say they will vote in 1968. The Playboy College Opinion Survey is based on responses from a representative sample of approximately 1,000 students from all classes, ages and back grounds who serve as a perma nent “sounding board” on ques tions of current interest. An other permanent panel of 200 faculty members—one representa tive of each campus, comprising a wide variety of educational fields—have been polled. The survey also reflects opinions from campuses on a regional basis—in the East, Midwest, South, South west and West. Analysis of returns on a regional basis shows that among students who chose the Demo cratic party, Eastern colleges gave their vote to Mr. Johnson by 39 per cent, while in the South the President pulled only 18 per cent. Among the Democratic faculty, the South went for Mr. Johnson by 58 per cent; the East, 49 per cent; and the West, 41 per cent. Gov. Scranton received 12 per cent of the Republican student vote in both the East and West, while Goldwater pulled 21 per cent in the South and 6 per cent in the Midwest. Republican faculty members in the East pre ferred Gov. Scranton by 22 per cent, while the Pennsylvania Governor received 9 per cent in the West, Goldwater received 12 per cent of the Midwestern Re publican faculty vote and 3 per cent of the Southern instructors. Copyright, 1965, by Playboy Mag azine. POSTAL WORKERS AND FEDERAL EMPLOYEES will be paid better under the new Federal Employees Pay Act. FARMERS AND RANCHERS will receive improved benefits under the new Farm Bill. DISABLED VETERANS will get more money under the Disability Compensation increase. SOCIAL SECURITY RECIPIENTS will receive a 7 per cent increase as a result of the new Social Security Amendments. S r iW) it OLDER AMERICANS will under the new Medicare Law as under the Omnibus Housing Law. receive well better medical treatment as better housing facilities UNDERPRIVILEGED AND POVERTY STRICKEN Americans will be given new opportunities under the Economic Opportunity Act Programs. MENTALLY ILL AND MENTALY RETARDED Americans will have increased hopes under the Mental Retardation Facilities and Community Mental Health Facilities Act. STA RURAL RESIDENTS benefit from the continued REA, Farmers Home Administration, and loans under the Housing and Urban Development Act. SO ALL AMERICANS will benefit from the Drug Abuse Control Act stopping illegal traffic in drugs. SERVICEMEN will Military Pay Raise. get better pay and benefits from ALL AMERICANS will be better off because of the programs instituted under the Highway Beautification Act. ALL AMERICANS will benefit from the Air Pollution Act and the Water Pollution Bill. Name Change (Continued from Page 1) Dallas area with its complex sys tem of government agencies,” he noted. “This indeed offers fertile possibilities for Arlington State to participate in.” Despite only a 300 student in crease over last year’s 11,500 (caused by limiting size of the freshman class for the first time), skyrocketing enrollment will con tinue to be the biggest headache confronting school officials for the next few years. The class rooms were overflowing last year and help will not be forthcoming until the mathematics-language building is completed in the fall of 1967. But Woolf is confident the hookup with UT will help ASC in its quest to become a first-rate institution. “The Board of Regents and chancellor have exhibited a very positive approach to our develop ment and see the potential of our institution for the future,” he said. “They understand the significance of our geographic location and the impact this has in structuring our academic pro gram. “They are not only willing — they are insistent that Arlington State College be developed into an outstanding high-quality school in all aspects, and we are very optimistic and confident for the future.” ‘DE Flowers Named VP Of Vet Association Dr. A. I. Flowers, head of the Department of Veterinary Public Health, has been elected first vice president of the Texas Veterinary Medical Association. Flowers and other officers will be installed at the annual conven tion in Corpus Christi Feb. 7. 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 enter prise edited and operated by students as a university and community newspaper. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for blication paper and local news of sponti Rights of republication of all other epublication of all ne' otherwise credited in the entitled exclusively dispatches credited to it or not es ci r and local rein. Rig! also reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. origin published herein, matter herein are Represented nationally by National Advertising Service, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Joe Buser, Arts ; Dr. Donald, College of Engineering; Dr. Robert Medicine; and Dr. A. B. >llege of Geosciences; Dr. Frank A. Me- Science; Dr. J. G. McGuire, College of tobert S. Titus, College of Veterinary Wooten, College of Agriculture. are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school per full year. All subscriptions subject to 2% Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: l he ± published in College Station, Texas daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, September through May, and once a week during summer school. Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M is Mail subscriptions year; $6.50 per full sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building, College Station, Texas. per da MEMBER The Associated Press, Texas Press Association EDITOR GLENN DROMGOOLE Managing Editor Gerald Garcia Sports Editor Larry Jerden News Editor Tommy DeFrank Photographer Herky Killingsworth PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz NEVER SET YOUR STOMACH FOR A JELLY-BREAD SANDWICH UNTIL YOU'RE SURE THERE'S SOME JELLY 1