In Miauuippi, . .. THE BATTALION Thursday, May 2, IMS Colley* Station, Texaa Pace 7 Disturbance Brings Arrests MARKS, Miaa. — Six No- grow wart arrested Wednesday in this northwest Mississippi town as the state highway pa trol forcibly dispersed a crowd of some 300 students gathered at the county jail near the court house. The students were protesting the jailing earlier of Willie Bol den, an official of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Sheriff L. V. Harrison of Quit- man County said no one was shot and no one was hurt during the disturbance. Earlier, the Ree. Dr. Ralph D. Abernathy, president of the SCLC, had said in Washing ton that seven persons had been shot Abernathy later said his report was erroneous. THE TOWN of Marks is sched uled to be a rallying point Thurs- FLORSHEIM SHOES at 9too Mantra w ~ wrafe wear day of a portion of the Poor Peo ples March on Waahington, which Abernathy will lead. Authorities said Bolden, from Atlanta, Ga., was arrested on charges of trespassing on school property and disturbing the peace. The arrest came after Bolden had entered Quitman High School and talked to the students. Sheriff Harrison said Bolden tried to induce the students to stage marches in connection with the Poor People’s March. AFTER Bolden’s arrest, about 300 students left the school and marched to the county jail, where they demanded Bolden be re leased. Authorities told the group to disperse. After 30 minutes, highway patrolmen moved in with gun butts raised and scattered the students. Afterward, two store windows in the downtown area were shattered. Six of the demonstrators were arrested, on charges of violation of a law prohibiting picketing or demonstrating in or near a court house. AFTERWARD, Sheriff Harri son said: “Everything hare is just as quiet as you want to see it” Those arrested were identified as Doris Baker, 18, of Marks; Jimmy L. Wells, 21, Atlanta; Ma jor Wright 47, Grenada, Mias.; Marjorie Hyatt, 22, Atlanta; Chester Thomas Jr., Canton, Miss, Andrew Marrisette, 27, Atlanta, and Bolden. The sheriff said there was no objection to anyone talking to the students, “but we didn't want them to take them out of school. We asked them to stay away from the school grounds. They proceeded to go there and that’s when we arrested the fellow named Willie Bolden.” Abernathy is scheduled to ar rive in Marks Thursday. Starts Hot Weather f all ELECT J. W. “Jim* O’BRIEN County Commissioner — Precinct I Class ’52 (Paid Pol. Adv. by friends of Jim O’Brien) THIS WILL STOP COLUMBIA RIVER FOR A WHILE usually conjures s picture Engineers will plug huge tubes through the John Day dam, begin to rise at right behind the dam. The Oregon shore ren running among spring stopping flow of the Columbia river. Lake Umatilla wiH is in background. (AP Wirephoto) NEED CASH / Money Gone After 9 Months of School? Then see us for a personal loan. Take advantage of our prompt, confidential loan service now. UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY 317 Patricia (North Gate) College Statiem Texaa Telephone: MS-8319 Call 822-1441 i r>n • , i ' Allow 20 Minute* „ # Carry Out or ESat-ln ™ * \ THE PIZZA HUT 2610 Texas Ave. May of children flowers, but the phrase is also a distress signal that may be sounded because of hot weather’s arrival. Texaa A AM’s Meteorology De partment climatologist, John F. Griffiths, notes that in May cool temperatures give way to hot days when hid-aftemoon temperatures average 86 degrees. * High temperature extremes for the fifth month range from 61 degrees on May 10, 1917, to 101 degrees in 1928, on the 27th. “Fortunately, 100 degree rend Ings are very rare in May,” the meteorology professor commented. “Sunrise temperatures average around 64 degrees and it illus- Lrates the vagaries of the weather to note that 1928 also gave the late May cold record of 48 de grees, on the 22nd.” The month's total rainfall has ranged from a tenth of an inch to over IB inches and averages out as the area’s wettest 30-day period, with a 4.8-inch norm. “Rain is generally recorded on seven days and during about 40 hours of the month. Showers are more likely to occur between 8 p.m. and 7 a.m. than during the daytime,” Griffiths pointed out. May Winds steerage 4 raph out of the southeast to south and cloud cover has averaged 60 per cent Sunrise on May 1 is at 6:43, sunset 8:02. At the end of the month the sun is visible from 6:23 to 8:21. Washington Grabs Indonesian Proposal To Hold Talks On Ship In Tonkin Gulf WASHINGTON <*> — The White House quickly agreed Wednesday to an Indonesian pro posal to hold preliminary peace talks with North Vietnam aboard an Indonesian cruiser to be sent to Tonkin Gulf. But it would surprise Wash ington officials if Hanoi accepts the floating-site offer. The Reds have already spumed a U. S. suggestion to meet in Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta. President press secretary George Christian and other U. S. spokesmen nonetheless gave straight-faced replies when asked about the latest twist in the month of maneuvering over where U. S. and North Vietnamese en voys should meet for their pro posed direct talks. INDONESIA'S foreign minis ter, Adam Malik, said after a cabinet meeting in Jakarta that his country has told the opposing sides it is willing to sail a cruiser to the Tonkin Gulf lying be tween the North Vietnameee and Red Chinese coasts — for s meet ing site. Mslik reported no formal reply had arrived yet from either Washington or Hanoi, although the Communists had indicated they still prefer their proposed sites — Phnom Penh, Cambodia or Warsaw. An Indonesian site is presum ably objectionable to North Viet- Menu Committee Meets Monday SMITH has been working forTexas since1944. Q years in the Texas House 6 years in the Texas Senate 0 years as LL Gov. of Texas Vote for the man with experience in every elective legislative office. Vote for Preston Smith for. Governor of Texas. The Civilian Student Menu Committee will meet with uni versity foal officials at noon Monday for its regular monthly diacusaion of Sbisa dining opera tions, announced Edwin H. Coop er, director of civilian student activities. Cooper said the group will meet In the Sbisa office of Col. Fred Dollar, food service direc tor, and then have lunch together. Any civilian student desiring to offer suggestions about the din ing operation is invited to contact one of the committee members and attend the luncheon meeting as his guest. Cooper said.' Permanent members of the committee are: Civilian Student Council President Griff Venator. Room 47, Milner Hall; Graduate Student Council President Ernest Knowles, 307 Live Oak, College Station; Civilian Student Council members George Walne, Room 47, Milner Hall, and Steve Bancroft, Room 424, Dorm 16. Cooper pointed out the Corps of Cadets has a separate menu committee. Pol. Adv. — Paid for by The Preston Smith Committee, tfarold Dudley, Manager THE FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY Now Holding Interviews for SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEES Due to rapid expansion there are unlimited opportunities in sales management with a corporation doing almost 2 billion dollars sales volume annually National Brand merchandise sold — Firestone, Philco, Delco, and many others. , . REQUIREMENTS 1— College graduate 2— Prefer applicant with completed military obligation 8—Good appearance and speaking voice, and have de* sire to excell in sales management as a career. BENEFITS 1— Rapid Advancement 2— 4625 Base Salary plus attractive Bonus Plan —Liberal Insurance Program for employee and de pendent 4— Excellent Retirement Program 5- —Annual paid vacation /v Writ* or Call Mr. J. H. Bo* max or Mr. L. 8. Scop*! The Fireatone lire A Rubber Company 6662 Supply Row Hooatoa, Texas 77611 AC 718 WA 3-1671 An Equal Opportunity Employer nam’s ally. Communist China. Peking broke relations with In donesia after the current leader ship there ousted the left-leaning Sukarno regime. THE WHITE House said Indo nesia’s offer — which comes in addition to 16 Asian and Euro pean locations previously pro posed by U. S. diplomats — “is acceptable to the United States.” “A neutral ship on a neutral sea would be a good meeting place,” Christian told newsmen in words recalling some presi dential oratory aboard the U. S. carrier Enterprise last Veterans Day. In that speech on the flight deck aboard the carrier off San Diego, Calif., President Johnson declared the U. S. search for peace would extend even to a meeting ground at sea — a vast place which might help men real ise the “ultimate smallness of their quarrel." “FOR I’S. the ward room could really be a ’conference room,” he said. “A neutral ship on a neutral sea would be as good a meeting place as any.” Johnson recalled that President Franklin D. Roosevelt mad Brit ain’s prime minister, Winston Churchill, had met aboard the U. S. cruiser Augusta off New foundland in August 1941 to draw up the Atlantic Charter. The charter was a statement of aims of the World War II allies. Water-borne meetings are sprinkled elsewhere through dip lomatic history, too. In 1807 Rus sia's Alexander I and France's Napoleon Bonaparte concluded a treaty aboard a river craft. U. S. Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur ac cepted Japan’s World War II sur render on the battleship Missouri. IF THE V. 8. and North Viet namese emissaries do wind up on an Indonesian warship, it could be Soviet-built. Malik did npt specify a particular vessel but the large scale Moscow arms deliveries to Indonesia during the Sukarno era included a cruiser, sources have said. Just how the arrangements for a shipboard Vietnam negotiation would be carried out remained obscure. Johnson has listed four requlrementx~for a site: That it be in a neutral atmos phere. have adequate communi cations. With free access for news coverage all nations, and ac- ‘cesa by representatives of all in terested governments. STATE DEPARTMENT press officer Robert J. McCloskey said international waters fall within the U. S. definition of a neutral area. It was in the international wa ters of the Tonkin Gulf, according to the U. S. verson, that North Vietnamese torpedo boats at tacked U. S. destroyers in mid- 1964 incidents preceding Ameri can bombing of North Vietnam. t BUSIER AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.M.A.—Veterans and Canvsntl—I Leans FARM A HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Me. 3633 Texaa Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3768 71 SCHERTLES GALLERIES ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS Priced From $10 to $125.00 CUSTOM FRAMING 10:00 a. «n. to 8 p. m. Mon. and Thur. 2016 Texaa Avenue Bryan, Texaa 10:00 a. at. to 6 p. m. Tues. Wed. Fri. Sat. , Phone 822-4317 s v j “Jim”: CLOSS State Representative . . . . District 18 4 AGGRESSIVE . MATURE - RELIABLE Political Ad Paid ibr by J. T. Gloss .