. • ‘ * ■: »* •': :■> -- .v • •■'•••• • >• - v • • -v r-y/. --..v;. • - • - • - •: ^ ■■ > • c ... :, ;•~■ Merry Christmas...Happy New Year...Beat Alabama! Miist L 1,1 is a.. 1ts "'itliii ^ es tom froi « Sii '««»(, toati, first a ?aiiis Che Battalion 1 Drive 1 I Safely :: : : VOLUME 61 COULEGE STATION, TEXAS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1967 Number 519 the b, team Hendei *ith 13j ne. E ai tlle gan Yule Activities Continue; AGGIE SWEETHEART Kathy Heldman and “Santa” Slouch Kathy Asks Santa To Visit Aggies Holiday Break Approaches Dear Cadet Slouch, Since you’re dressed up like Santa Claus, I’d like ? to introduce myself and tell you what I want for | Christmas. My name is Kathy Heldman. You see | I’m extremely proud of the Aggies so I want a few | special things for them. First of all I want you to let all the Aggies have | a safe and enjoyable trip home, to the Cotton Bowl j Game and then back to Aggieland. For all the coaches and their respective teams I | want a Conference Championship. | To Coach Stallings and the football team, a Cotton | Bowl Victory with all the players free from injuries, j On New Year’s Day I would like for the Twelfth ! Man with its Fightin’ Texas Aggie Spirit to spread j throughout the nation and let this spirit last for years j and years to come. | Cadet Slouch, since you are so close to the Aggies, i I want you to send each and everyone of them a thank- \ you for me. Being Aggie Sweetheart has brought me ! many wonderful experiences and memories. My Christmas and New Year will be one I’ll never forget. The cards I have received at school and the HOWDYS [ I get from them at Aggieland make me the proudest | girl ever. My one last gift to the Aggies is to let all their dreams come true during the Christmas Holi ’ays and the New Year. Cadet Slouch, will you introduce me to all the i Aggies I haven’t met? No! Wait. I’ll make that j my New Year’s Resolution!! Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! Love, Kathy Heldman UN Group Recesses Discussion On Anti-Proliferation Treaty By CHARLES STORER Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. ) —The U! N. General Assembly’s Main Political Committee voted Monday for a resumption of the assembly session next spring- to debate a proposed treaty to pre vent the spread of nuclear wea pons. The resolution, approved 94 to 1 with four abstentions, was one of several key disarmament ques tions considered by the committee as it wound up its business for the year. In the show of hands, Albania opposed the resolution and Cuba, France, Ghana and Mali abstained. THE ASSEMBLY, now in its adjournment rush, will take up University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M” —Adv. YMCA Schedules Program Tonight By BOB PALMER Battalion Staff Writer As Aggies prepare to return home for the holidays, Christmas activities cram the schedule for both campus and community. The annual Christmas dinner in Duncan and Sbisa Dining Halls Monday night was a highlight of the remaining days before the holidays begin at 5 p.m. Wednes day. Aggies donated fruit on their tables to the Bryan Boys Club to help the ^underprivileged children of the area. The “Campus - Community Christmas” program will begin at 8 p.m. Tuesday in front of the Systems Administration Build ing. THE PROGRAM will feature the Singing Cadets and the light ing of a 25-foot tree. The tree, cut by YMCA members south of College Station, will be trimmed with about 400 lights, according to David Howard, YMCA public relations chairman. “This tree will serve as a sym bol of the best wishes of the stu dent body toward the community,” Howard said. The tree will be lit every night until New Year’s. The School of Architecture will treat area youngsters to a “Christmas Happening” from 1 to 7 Tuesday afternoon in the Architecture Building. THE CHILDREN will be given pinatas filled with treats, and will be taken on a tour of “Funs- ville.” The trip includes trolley rides through “mountains,” crawl ing through “Carlsbad Caverns,” and a 60-foot toboggan ride. Australian PM Declared Lost; Services Set Although most Aggies will be vacating the campus, some to whom home is too far away must spend Christmas here. Dorm 22 and ramps E, F, G, H, I, J and K will be left open for them, while all others will be closed. For the duration of the holi days, the bowling and billiards area of the Memorial Student Center will serve normal func tions of the entire building. News papers will be sold and dominoes, checkers and other games will be dispensed there. The rest of the Center will shut down Friday. HOLIDAY activities will con tinue during the break for faculty and staff. Tickets are now on sale for $3 at the main desk of the MSC for the Faculty-Staff Dinner Dance Club’s Christmas party Dec. 28. The party, planned for the Ra- mada Inn at 7 p.m., will be open to other faculty and staff mem bers. MSC personnel and families will have a party where “Santa” will hand out gifts to the 100 youngsters expected to attend. Marring the Christmas atmos phere of the holidays is the theft during the weekend of YMCA Christmas lights. “They took three strings of electric lights and about 90 per cent of our Christmas decora tions,” J. Gordon Gay, YMCA director, reported. He said this was the first such occurrence in 27 years. The latest forecast by the uni versity’s weather station indicates Aggies should have generally good driving conditions for their trips home and back to school. Jim Lightfoot, station manager, predicted the only hazardous driv ing in the state Wednesday and Thursday will be in the moun tains in far West Texas. the resolution Tuesday. Since all 123 U. N. members are represent ed on the committee, assembly ap proval is considered certain. The assembly is scheduled to complete its work for the year Tuesday night. The Political Committee also adopted a resolution urging sus pension of a)l nuclear tests, un derground as well as in the at mosphere, and called “as a mat ter of urgency” for a treaty to bar underground tests. OTHER RESOLUTIONS ap proved provide for continued con sideration of general and complete disarmament and elimination of foreign military bases in Asia, Africa and Latin America. An other schedules for August and September a conference of state without nuclear weapons to con sider their security problems. By GORDON TAIT Associated Press Writer CANBERRA, Australia (A*)— The government declared the orime ministry vacant Monday night and Australian officials prepared to receive President Johnson at a memorial service Friday for Prime Minister Har old E. Holt. Johnson will fly 10,173 miles to Melbourne to pay his respects to the man who led Australia as a strong supporter of U. S. policy in the Far East. The President will leave Washington at noon Tuesday and arrive about 30 hours later—Thursday—in Aus tralia, on the other side of the International Date Line. Governor-General Lord Casey ended Holt’s commission as prime minister and announced that Deputy Prime Minister John Mc- Ewen will be sworn in as interim prime minister Tuesday. Casey had delayed the action while there was hope that Holt had survived the riptides that swallowed him as he was swimming Sunday. The memorial services was scheduled for noon, Friday, in St. Paul’s Church of England Ca thedral, Melbourne. ’63 Grad Named For Viet Service Battalion Staff To Get Holiday Break This will be the last edition of The Battalion for 1967. So until next year, may we wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Our next edition for the new year will be January 5. First Bank & Trust now pays 5% per annum on savings certif icates. —Adv. CHRISTMAS DINNER Students enjoy the traditional turkey-and-trimmings Christmas dinner in Duncan Din ing Hall. Guests included officers from the Military and Air Science departments and other administrative personnel. Holiday Sent ina rs Sch edu led For 33 Dominican Students Rain, however, is expected for most of the state Christmas. Cotton Bowlers can anticipate a crisp but dry day. Dallas weather for New Years should be clear to partly cloudy with temperatures in the high 30’s or low 40’s, Lightfoot said. The favorable weather should continue through Jan. 3, the meteorologist continued, allowing students safe driving conditions for their trip back to the campus. Texas A&M students from the Dominican Republic will continue their education straight through the Christmas holidays. Outside the classroom, lab and textbook, that is. The 33 sophomore and fresh man students under Agency for International Development con tract will participate in mid winter leadership training semi nars, announced Dr. Jack Gray, International Programs director at A&M. orientation on local government, tour major points of interest and experience citizen participation in local public issues,” he went Sponsored by international visi tors councils, schools, colleges and service organizations, the stu dents will be among 30 AID-spon- ID Cards Required For Cotton Bowl Students will scatter to 19 U. S. cities Dec. 21-30. “The main purpose of the semi nars is for experience in different cultural environments,” explained William E. Beach, International Programs campus coordinator for AID-Dominican Republic. “They will view the major seg ments of U. S. society, receive Students and faculty mem bers who bought $3 Cotton Bowl tickets, with stub at tached, must have an identi fication card to be admitted to the stadium Jan. 1, Wally Groff, athletic business man ager, noted Monday. Faculty- members who do not have ID’s may pick them up at the per sonnel office. sored participants in each city. Including families who invite the boys to stay in their homes at Christmas, from 50 to 75 persons in each city will be involved in the seminar, Beach said. A&M students will be in Hart ford, Conn.; East Lansing, Mich.; Seattle, Wash.; San Diego, Calif., and Miami, Fla., and most of the nation’s major cities. “Many of our students asked for northern and northeast loca tions since they have never ex perienced winter conditions in cluding ice and snow,” Beach noted. “They will exchange experi ences and ideas when they return to the campus,” he added. Bryan Building & Loan Association, Your Sav ings Center, since 1919. bb&l —Adv. Air Medal Winner A Texas A&M and Bryan High graduate, Air Force Capt. Ronald W. Marshall, has been awarded the Air Medal for combat service in Southeast Asia. The son of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Marshall, 4310 Hwy. 6 N., was cited for outstanding airmanship and courage as a C-135 Strato- lifter navigator. Captain Marshall is now as signed at Fairchild AFB, Wash., in a unit of the Strategic Air Command. He studied physical education at A&M, graduated and was commissioned in 1963. His wife, Jean, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Lynch, 711 Inwood Drive, Bryan. CHRISTMAS MOOD AT THE WHITE HOUSE The National Christmas tree stands brightly lighted in the Ellipse near the White House, background, after lighting ceremonies. The full moon was added to picture by double ex posure. (AP Wirephoto) 4ggies’ Shout: ‘One More Day And We’ll Be Out!’