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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1969)
Before FulbrighVs Committee Rogers Calls For Simultaneous Pullout TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO 909 S. Main 822-6000 * No. 1 In College Sales Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company 303 College Main 846-8228 WASHINGTON <A>) _ Secre tary of State William P. Rogers declared U. S. readiness Thurs day for secret talks with the en emy on a Vietnam settlement, and for simultaneous U.S.-North Vietnamese troop withdrawal “over a very short period of time.” But Rogers avoided saying such private negotiations have already begun at Paris — on grounds that talking about secret talks impairs their usefulness— and he indicated the enemy has not yet accepted Saigon’s latest offer for informal meetings. Rogers testified at Senate For eign Relations Committee hear ings, giving a global account of the foreign policy of the new Nixon administration. The ses sion was carried on radio and television. It was the new secretary of state’s first such appearance be fore the group headed by Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark. and the cordial atmosphere contrasted with the chill accorded Dean Rusk during his latter months as secretary of state. MANY committeemen found Rusk too tough on Vietnam poli cy. “I think your first perform ance has been excellent . . . very useful and an auspicious begin ning,” Fulbright told the 55-year- old Rogers, a former lawyer, at the wind-up of three hours of testimony. Rogers ranged through current foreign issues in his overall presentation — defending Presi dent Nixon’s go-ahead for an antiballistic missile system, ex pressing hope for a Middle East solution, foreseeing potential sub stantial progress in dealing with the Soviets. On Vietnam, he offered the fullest outline publicly delivered by the Nixon administration to date on how it hopes to achieve peace. The secretary of state said that basically, a satisfactory settle ment bringing stability to South east Asia probably must come from an international political agreement rather than a Korea- type solution leaving sizable U,S. forces still on the scene for guard duty. HE TREATED the Viet Cong’s attack on the Saigon govern ment’s offer of private negotia tions as probably “propaganda” and said that past negotiating progress in the Paris talks and “out of the way places” had come through secret sessions, also in Paris. “I don’t put much faith in what they say publicly,” Rogers said of Hanoi and Viet Cong ut terances. “If they are serious about peace and want to talk in good faith, we are ready.” Rogers added that the United States and its allies “are offer ing an honorable and reasonable outcome” and “it is our fervent hope that the other side will soon put polemics aside and begin in good faith to negotiate an end to this tragic war.” ON THE military side, Rogers said, the United States is seek- BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day 4<! per word 3^ per word each additional day Minimum charge—60^ Classified Display Display 80tf per column inch each insertion WORK WANTED TYPING—IBM SEDECTRIC. Disserta tion experience. Fast, accurate, reasonable. Guaranteed. Call anytime. 846-8628. 76tl TYPING — 846-3290. Typing wanted by professional typist IBM Selectric. Call Mrs. E. D. Max son after 6 p. m. 846-3192. 7'6tfn on son TYPING — Electric, Very Reasonable. Irs. David R. Miller. 822-2048. 56tfn Typing. 823-6410 or 822-5053. 30tfn STUDENTS 1 SERVICES UNLIMITED is ready to help you with your typing, xerox copywork printing needs, and multi- liting. LET "SU WORK FOR YOU. 1 1907 S. College, Bryan, Texas. 823-5362. 606tfn FOR SALE 1968 Honda 305 streetbike. 2,500 miles. $485. 845-1579. 93t2 1967 Yamaha. 305cc scrambler (6,000 miles). Call 846-3626. 91t3 1957 Ford station wagon V-8 auto. $100. 845-4994. 91t3 Down sleeping bags. Army mummy style, like new, $16.00. Also new field jackets, half shelters, cots, hammocks and nummy st: field jacket, half shelters, cots, hammocks and miscel laneous equipment for campers. Call 846- 5574 after 6 :00. 91tfn 1960 Opal. 5 :00. $250. Call 845-1520 before 89tfn 1967 V.W. new tires. Good condition. 846-7985. 88tfn Registered quarter horse, coming 3-year- old, broken and gentle. Call 822-3980. 1965 Chevrolet, Super-Sport Impala V-8. Clean, excellent condition, good tires. $1395. 846-4028. 80tfn ers, Kodak cameras, 4 track & 8 track tape decks, cassette car and home players, portable phonographs, stereo record play- pqonograpns, ers, tennis racquets, like new 4 & 8 track tapes, metal folding chairs—these itei tapes, metal folding chairs—these items are all fantastic bargains. Aggie Den 307 University Drive. 61tfn TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed Lowest Prices HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874 Hold your horses! IMPORT CAR BUYERS Maverick’s coming April 17! CADE MOTOR CO. 1700 Texas Ave. Phone 823-0044. Use Your BANKAMERICARD 33c qt. Havoline, Amalie, Enco, Conoco. -—EVERYDAY— We stock all local major brands. Where low oil prices originate. Quantity Rights Reserved Wheel Bearings 50% Off Parts Wholesale Too Filters, Oil, Air - Fuel, 10,000 Parts - We Fit 90% of All Cars Save 25 - 40%. Brake Shoes $3.19 ex. 2 Wheels — many cars Auto trans. oil 25 AC - Champion - Autolite plugs Starters - Generators All 6 Volt - $11.95 Each Most 12 Volt - $12.95 Each Tires—Low price every day — Just check our price with any other of equal quality. Your Friedrich Dealer Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas JOE FAULK ’32 22 years in Bryan WANTED Wanted to buy for cash in late May or before; 50’ x 12’ mobile home. Call Brian Green, 822-0808 and leave message. 90tl Individual needed Wednesday mornings 9-12. Wide variation of interesting work. 846-3462. Wolf Institute Electronics. 91t4 ROOMMATE — Male. Share expenses. Apply 606 Oak, between 5:15 p. m. and 6:15 p. m. only. Anytime week-end morn ings. 91t3 SPECIAL NOTICE Carryall 1950, Chev. 4 Dr. Dr. 1966, three Plymouth Station wagons men chines, typewriters, laundry equipment, tables, chairs, desk, many other items, 274 lots. Bid forms will be available and sealed bids received in the Office of the Director of Purchasing and Stores, Ashbury Chev. PU 1953, Chev. Dump 1951^ Chev. . 19< Stati i Wa gons furni ners, duplicating ma- li 165, Ford 4 JFIyi ^ ■- •*- i — 64 & 66, three Dodg 64, two Chev. Station Wagons 67 & 62, corn- vacuum clear FOR RENT One bedroom, furnished efficiency apart ment. Adjoining South campus. Call 846- 91tfn Available April 1st. 5 bedroom house. 4 or 5 student renters. Furnished 2610 So. College Ave. Call 822-3526. 86tfn Purchasing Street, College Station, Texas until 8 a. April 11, 1969. This propert; inspected between the hou rty of s, Ashbury itil 8 a. m. may m. be n the hours and 4 :30 p. m. Monday thru Friday e cept holidays, by contacting the office the Inventory Supervisor at the abo- ddress, for information call The right is reserved to reject any and all bids and to waive any and all techni- WE BUY MOST ANYTHING — AGGIE DEN. 51tfn HELP WANTED Industrial Engineer. Leading Tex: residential aluminum manufacturer seeks ambitious Industrial Engineer or related ambitious industrial hingineer or related field graduate with two years experience in work analysis and/or quality control. Salary $10,000 range benefits. No travel. or qua ith excellent fringe Located Send resume to ALENCO, Div. of Redman Industries, 615 Carson, Bryan, Texas, 77801. An equal opportunity employer. 93t4 in Bryan. We nee preferred, who needs work, who is taking 15 hours or less at A&M per semester, working in our retail store, during school sessions and summer months. May be single or married. The right man may work his entire college years in our store. Reply to Box 542 in Bryan, stating your age, previous experience, etc., in own hand writing. 89tfn HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS ZENITH RADIOS & PHONOS KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 Watch Repairs Jewelry Repair Diamond Senior Rings Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 S TER LI MG ELECTRO MIC 5 sound equipment Ampex Roberts Fisher Sony Scott Panasonic tape decks Harmon-Kardop 903 South Main, Bryan 822-1589 Personal Loans LOANS $100 Confidential Loan Service University Loan Co. 317 Patricia (North Gate) Telephone 846-8319 TRINITY GARDENS Duplex Apartments 2 bedrooms li/j baths attached garage washer & dryer connections asher rivatel; jilt-in custom drapes & ca: privately fenced backyard built-in GE kitchens ipes & carpet next to So. Knoll elementary school no additional pets we deposit for pets Manager — 846-3988 Lawyer St. Trinity PI. For rent. 1, 2. and 3 bedroom apartments. New with central air. Some carpeted. Cali 846-4717 or 846-8285. VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University STUDENTS ! ! Need A Home 1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 2-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 WE RENT TYPEWRITERS Electric, Manual, & Portable OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328 Bryan, Texas Shop your one-stop store and save on hardware, auto parts, bicycles, and major appliances. WHITE AUTO STORE, Bryan and Colleg’e Station. 846-5626. AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College CHILD CARE Child care. Call for information. 846-8151. 598tfn Gregory’s Day Nursery, 504 Boyett, 846-4005. 693tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN TER, 3400 South College, State Licensed. 823-8626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn OFFICIAL NOTICE Those undergraduate students who have 95 semester hours of credit may purchase the A&M ring. The hours passed at the time of the preliminary grade report, March 31, 1969 may be used in satisfying the 95 hour requirement. The students qualifying ur requirement. The students quali under this regulation may leave their name with the Ring Clerk in the Registrar’s Office, in order that she may check the rds to determine their eligibility to reco: order the ring. Orders for the rings will be taken April 21 through May 28. All rings will be returned to the Registrar’s office on or about July 10, 1969 for further delivery. The Ring Clerk is on duty from 8:00 to 12:00 noon Monday through Friday, in the Richard Coke Building - Room 7. education will be offered from 2 to 4 p. m. on April 15 (Tuesday), 1969, and again from 4 to 6 p. m. the same day. Students may take the examination at either time by reporting to Room 308 Nagle. Exam inees should bring pen, pencil, dictionary, and composition paper. 76tfn “SPRING AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS Studen YMCA Buildin ruary 17th Aid Office, Roou* ding during the period Feb- - March 31, ruary 17th - March 31, 1969. All appli cations must be filed with the Student Financial Aid Office by not later than April 1, 1969. Late applies- 66t26 5:00 p. m. April 1, 196S tions will not be accepted. Pre-veterinary medicine students who pect to qualify as applicants to the ■ofessionai College of Veterinary Medicine September 1969 may obtain applications e Regi deadlii n H. L. Heaton, Dean of Admissions and Records sdline for filing applications and transcripts with the Registn GM Lowest Priced Cars $49.79 per mo. With Normal Down Payment OPEL KADETT Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick 26th & Parker 822-1307 2700 Texas Ave. 822-1336 SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-1941 ENGINEERING & OFFICE SUPPLY CORP. REPRODUCTION & MEDIA — ARCH. & ENGR. SUPPLIES SURVEYING SUPPLIES & EQUIPMENT — OF FICE SUPPLIES • MULTILITH SERVICE & SUPPLIES 402 West 25th St. Ph. 823-0939 Bryan, Texas ATTENTION STUDENTS AND STAFF MEMBERS If you moved to College Station in 1967, or 1968, you may be eligible for special tax benefits. FOR THIS AND OTHER TAX INFORMATION CONTACT: BLOCKER TRANT, Income Tax Consultant 4015 Texas Avenue — Bryan, Texas Phone 846-7842 ing agreement with North Viet nam on mutual troop pullouts which would scale down hostili ties and promote peace talks. “We are prepared to begin withdrawals of our forces simul taneously with those of north Vietnam,” he said. As for the political future of South Vietnam, he testified that is an issued to be settled among the South Vietnamese them selves. The United States does not want to wield veto power over that part of an over-all settle ment, he said. Seminar Set For Teachers On PEI Tour Twenty-three teachers who will visit countries in Central and South America, the Caribbean and Canada as representatives of Programa de Educacion Inter- americana wi&l attend an intro ductory seminar here Saturday and Sunday. The program, a Title III proj ect under the joint cooperation of A&M and the Bryan Independent School District, is directed by Dr. Earl Jones. Dr. Frank W. R. Hubert, dean of the College of Liberal Arts, serves as project adviser. Bryan School Superintendent Alton Bowen represents the district. The 1969 summer travel-study groups, composed of four teams each, include Leora Sue Smith, Melanie Duhr and Elvin Tyrone of Bryan and Mrs. Catharyn Wor ley of College Station. OTHERS attending the two-day orientation are Gloria Spell, Vic toria; Miguel F. Bustilloz, Mid land; Clara Gregory, Austin; Dr. Betty Goody, Beaumont; Scott Darr, Abilene; Mrs. Marie Harris, Orange; Mrs. Helen White, Kountze and Mrs. Imogene Holt, Lubbock. Also Mrs. Evelyn Pettitfils, Galveston; Jesus Noriega, Rio Grande City; Mrs. Lola M. Le- Blanc, Corpus Christi; Mrs. Max ine Roy, Amarillo; Mrs. Berry B. Brawford, El Paso, and Clinton mith, Waco. From Houston are Sister Mary Hubert, Linda Francis, and Mrs. Josephine Petty and from San Angelo, Sister Margaret Rose Palmer and Vauna Wheeler. Jones pointed out it is the first time the participants will meet each other and review their travel arrangements. “IT WILL also provide the teachers an opportunity to meet their educational attache,” added Jones. The attache, in all in stances, is a graduate student. They are Stephen S. Stewart, Paris; Jerry L. Moody, Hearne; James F. Ward, Maryville, Tenn., and Elvin Tyrone, Bryan. Although teachers will visit many cities in Canada, including fishing villages. Viking excava tions in New Foundland, and gold mines in the Yukon, Programa’s primary emphasis is on on “un derstanding and appreciation of our neighbors to the south,” Jones said. ' 5 >.:•</ 5 FIRST NEGRO IN HOUSE OF LORDS Sir Learier Constantine, 67, is shown in his robes as kf became the first Negro to take a seat in the British Hons of Lords in London. Lord Constantine, once a famois cricket player, was high commissioner for Trinidad ami Tobago in London. (AP Wirephoto) Caesarean Section Used In Filly Birtk M Wea toug Club [yard ing and A quarterhorse mare and her filly, foaled by Caesarean section a week ago, are romping in a Texas A&M pasture — compli ments of modern technology and the skill of two veterinarians. The successful operation was hailed as “one of those once in a life-time” events by large ani mal clinic head Dr. W. M. Ro- mane of the College of Veteri nary Medicine. The operation was performed by Dr. Tommy L. Bullard and Dr. Don R. McDonald. The procedure is so rare, add ed Romane, that a survey of 14 veterinarians ranging up to 30 years of experience, were aware of only eight such operations. Only three operations were suc cessful. “Two of these were with Shet- lands,” said Romane, a veteran of 25 years in the profession. WHILE COMMON on a cow or dog, the operation “is real rare” in mares, he said. Romane was unable to furnish an official percentage “because it is so infrequent.” He noted the mare is often “sacrificed to save the colt, or filly.” Romane praised the veterin arians, saying, “It is a compli ment to both physicians.” Success was also attributed to the college’s facilities and im proved techniques as well as anesthesia now available in the college. Romane pointed out mares are “very susceptible to shock and infection. When labor starts, it’s severe — even violent — and the mare can mutilate herself, or in jure her colt, or both.” A&M EXPERIENCED one other successful Caesarean sec tion on a Shetland mare in 1959, Romane recalled. Bullard and McDonald, admit ting it was the first successful Caesarean section observed, pointed out the mare had been cared for under ideal conditia at the university since FeU The mare, Otoe Own, stiffen a fractured pelvis three yeffi ago in a race, necessitating i artificial delivery. Immediate!! following the Caesarean setfe both the mare and filly receiiii blood transfusions with theft! being placed under oxygen. “If we had waited another 5 minutes (to perform the open tion), we would have lost boti 1 said Romane. Otoe Own is a daughter i Otoe, a Triple A racing horsei well as American Quarter Ha Association halter champ:. Her filly was sired by Go ft Go Junior. The mare’s owner is Hi; Miller of White Water, Wis. SB’S Loses Figlii In Federal Court! Ai the Nati Tour Ihitte just bird Snee thre Ti my, anot 320 chip clos: Tl at t nel Crar Sike ton, Tl was Bab P; hitti ca’s neve ied 6,92 10 . iut othe NEW ORLEANS <#> -1 ^ Students for a Democratic: ciety at the University of Tfl at Austin lost their fight Tb® day in the U.S. 5th Circuit Cof of Appeals to force the unin sity to let them use campus: cilities for a meeting of the SI national council. The court rejected an app from a judgment by the fedu district court in Austin, wh refused Monday to grant a ts porary restraining order to St The ruling leaves the without a place to meet, but le> ers have said they would holf here this weekend anyway. Some 1,200 to 1,500 SDS 0 bers from across the nation* attend, they said. Larry Waterhouse, a Ten member, testified Monday tl university officials gave himi surances last month that i SDS could use the Union Bii ing. MANAGEMENT MINDED? Consider the unique advantage to you in starting with KROGER The Nation’s Third Largest Food Retailer Interested in Majors in: • Marketing • Management • Liberal Arts • General Business • Economics • Finance • Merchandising We Offer: TRAINING PROGRAM • RAPID ADVANCEMENT • GOOD PAY • PROFIT SHARING • EXCELLENT BENEFITS FIND OUT NOW WHAT KROGER CAN OFFER YOU AT GRADUATION SIGN UP NOW IN YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR CAMPUS INTERVIEW WITH COMPANY REPRESENTATIVE FRANK PAGE April 8, 1969 An Equal Opportunity Employer PROFESSIONAL* and TECHNICAL*.. ’69 GRADUATES £PAam/wc& ★“EMPLOYERS PAY FOR OUR SERVICES.’ EMPLOYMENT SERVICE •College Division# North Gate 331 University Dr. 846-3737