,ble tennis balls struck by essional players have been :ked at speeds of nearly 100 an hour. perma-crease West bury Slacks $u(t Stnrnco untbersfitp metrst toear 328 University Drive 718/846-2706 Collette Station, Texas 77840 Cafeterii [.U. SCHOOL OF LAW representative of the South- Methodist University School Law, Dallas, Texas, will be campus 3:00 p. m., Tuesday, ember 9, 1969, Room 204 ;le Hall, to talk with inter- ;d students about admission uirements and financial a£- ance. For information and make appointments, see Dr. M. Nance, Dept, of History, Nagle Hall. TONITE “THE BASEMENT” FOLK, ROCK, JAZZ FRIDAY & SATURDAY 8:00- 12:00 MSC HORNS A-PLENTY Mrs. Kathryn Morse, in behalf of the citizens of Manning, Canada, presented a set of mounted, polished moose antlers to Dr. O. D. Butler, head of the Animal Science Depart ment. The rack measures about 50 inches across and comes from a moose that weighed from 1,300 to 1,400 pounds. Mrs. Morse made the presentation at A&M’s recent Horse Short Course. Ph.D. PROGRAM (Continued from page 1) nears completion of all course work, he must pass written and oral qualifying examinations in four fields of history, three of which are in American history. A student may concentrate in any recognized field of Ameri can history, such as colonial, Old South, early national, or Jack sonian, Nance said. The student will present a minor area of concentration out side the history department in some other field of study in so cial sciences, humanities or edu cation. Nance added that students in terested in pursuing graduate work in history should contact the graduate advisor in the His tory Department. BA TTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES e day 4<‘ per per word each additional Minimum charge—50c Classified Display 90c per column inch each insertion DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication FOR RENT word day bedroom furnished. 602 Cherry, air loner, $90. 846-5444 after 5 p. m. 47t3 ler house for rent. Two bedrooms. 46 ft. $94 per month. 846-5508. 46t2 ler space for rent. City water and ge removal furnished. Two miles on Hwy. 6. 846-7097 after 2 p. m. 4513 liable January 1st. Two bedroom un- 4ed brick duplex apartment. 504 C.S. $85 per month, e seen after 6 p. m. 846-4005. 46tfn VILLAGE PARK NORTH "Mobile Living In Luxuary” 4413 HWY. 6 NORTH ed & guttered street, concrete off- et parking, concrete leveling pads, ed playground, city utilities, cable gutter •king, d playground, city utilities, cab large concrete patio, swimmir gas grills. Telephone DAY 822-0803 NIGHT 822-5234 45tfn Tapes iy ea. o bedroom apartment, unfurnished, lumished $100. Central air, married es only. University Acres. 846-5120. 34tfn WANTED WANTED: Commercial Artist. Position quires creative ability to draw, letter, d prepare finished art work for produc- >n. Some color. Contact Texas Forest rvice. 845-2641. Equal employment op- rtunity will be given each qualified Wanted: Family with fenced yard to care for well-mannered Irish Setter over Christmas vacation. 846-3722. 44t4 CHILD CARE Child care. Call for information. 846-8151. 598tfn Gregory’s Day Nursery, 504 Boyett 846-4005. 593tfr HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN TER, 3400 South College, State Licensed. 823-8626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn HELP WANTED ANYONE interested in making $100 or more for 12 to 15 hours work per week call 846-7768 or 845-1868. 46t2 Evening full or part time help. Daytime carhop need at A&W Root Beer. 22tfn WORK WANTED House cleaning and ironing. Part-time or full time. 846-4891. 41t8 Typing, full time. Notary Public, Bank- Americard accepted, 823-6410 or 823-3838. lOtfn TYPING - electric - experienced - full time - Mrs. Miller - 823-1088. 2tfn TYPING, electric. Close to campus. Expe rienced. Reasonable. 846-2934. Itfn )ing. 165. TS, SOS^HWY. 30. Reserve now for d semester. d semester. One and two bedroom, shed and unfurnished, carpeted, sd, all electric kitchen, individual air . ■ ... - p a i di $216. ien. Honing and heat. All utilities ming pools. From $140 111. lely furnished, two bedroom apart- . In the country on ranch. About dnutes drive from College. Ideal for or four students. Central heat and All utilities paid. $140. 823-3733 10 a. m. until 9 p. m. except Sunday. 13tfn s Schulz VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan & A&M University STUDENTS ! ! Need A Home 1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur. Pool and Private Courtyard 3 MONTHS LEASE 122-5041 401 Lake St. Apt. 1 RE8TONE $1.59 Gal. Havoline, Amalie, Enco, Conoco. 31c qt. -EVERYDAY— k stock all local major brands, fere low oil prices originate. Quantity Rights Reserved Vheel Bearings - Exhausts System Parts, Filters, Water and Fuel Pumps. Almost Any Part Needed 25-40% Off List hake Shoes $3.69 ex. 2 Wheels — many cars We Stock EELCO EDELBROCK HURST MR GASKET CAL CUSTOM Other Speed Equipment barters - Generators All 6 Volt - $12.95 Each Most 12 Volt - $13.95 Each Your Friedrich Dealer Joe Faulk Auto Parts E. 25th Bryan, Texas JOE FAULK ’32 24 years in Bryan TYPING WANTED. Dissertation, term paper experience. Reasonable rates. 823- 5962. 119tfn TROPHIES PLAQUES Engraving Service Ask About Discounts Texas Coin Exchange, Inc. 1018 S. Texas 822-5121 Bob Boriskie ’55 COINS SUPPLIES FOR SALE 19 feet upright freezer, Sears refrigera- r, two, 6 ft. rubber plants, one mattress, curtain rods. 846-5609 or drapery and 822-1740. 1967 Camaro Super Sports, black viny) top, 427, four speed. Reasonably priced. Phone 846-8898 anytime. 44 OFFICIAL NOTICE for the Dcpart- 1957 Dodge pick-up, V-8. $300. days, 846-2791 after 6 p. m. 845-4621 44t4 1966 VW Convertable. 40.000 miles. 4621 days, 846-2791 after 6 p. m. 845- 44t4 FIELD JACKETS, COMBAT BOOTS. New style army field jackets with zip-out hood in collar. New $12.00. Excellent $10.00. Army issue combat boots, new 846-5574 after 5 $9.00. ends. m. and week- 37tfn ’57 Ford station wagon, air-cond., : matic, full power. 1202 Dominik, 846-: auto- 3846. 37tl SPECIAL NOTICE RIDE WANTED: To N. Y. for Christ mas holidays. Contact John Willis, 403 Tauber, C.S. 46tfn AGGIE RING DIAMONDS! 1/5 Carat Price: $35 Phone: 845-4600 Registration Procedures ment of Wildlife Science All students with less than 60 hours will report to their freshman advisor (excep- rep tions are transfers from another school or another department). Students with than 60 hours or transfers from Her school or another department will consult either Dr. Strawn (Fisheries Op tion) or Dr. Arnold (Wildlife Option). Graduate students will consult their ap propriate advisor. ALL FINAL CLASS REQUESTS MUST BE SIGNED BY EI THER DR. STRAWN OR DR. ARNOLD. Appointments for Dr. Arnold may be made at the desk of the Departmental Secretary (Mrs. Karen Thorn). OFFICE OF THE DEAN OF ADMISSIONS AND RECORDS To be eligible to purchase the Texas A&M University ring, an undergraduate stu dent must have at least one academic year in residence and credit for ninety-five (95) semester hours. The hours passed at the preliminary grade report period on No vell* er 10, 1969 may be used in satisfy ing this ninety-five hour requirement. Stu dents qualifying under this regulation may now leave their names with the ring clerk, a Seven, Richard Coke Building. She, irn, will check all records to determine eligibi: Room Seven, Richard Coke in turn, will check all recor ring eligibility. Orders for these rings will be taken by TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed Lowest Prices HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874 PARENTS - TEACHERS, Give an Educational Gift for Christmas! ENCYCLOPEDIAS Book of Knowledge 1968 Ed, 20 Vol, $40. 1969 Ed, 20 Vol, $55. New Standard Encyclopedia 1968 Ed, 14 Vol, $30. 1969 Ed, 14 Vol, $40. Encyclopedia International 1969 Ed, 20 Vol, $60. American Peoples Encyclopedia 1969 Ed, 20 Vol, $50. Webster’s Dictionary 1969 Ed, 2 Vol, $12.50. 302 North Avenue Phone: 846-9023 4 CM Lowest Priced Cars $49.79 per mo. With Normal Down Payment OPEL KADETT Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick 2700 Texas Ave. 26th & Parker 822-1336 822-1307 Orders for these rings will be taken by the ring clerk between November 24, 1969 and January 6, 1970. The rings will be re turned to the Registrar’s Office to be delivered on or about February 20, 1970. The ring clerk is on duty from 8:00 a.m. to 12 :00 noon, Monday through Friday, of each week. H. L. Heaton, Dean Admissions and Reco LOST REWARD FOR RETURN OF One diamond engagement ring and topaz birthstone. Left in the Library. Call 845-2451 or 846-5470 42tfn AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 LOOKING FOR A HOME J\elson Jflolih Jiomes, $nc. 811 Texas Ave. 846-9135 College Station 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 SOSOLIK'S TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes B&W TV Repairs 713 S. MAIN 822-2133 WHITE AUTO STORES Bryan and College Station can save you up to 40% on auto parts, oil, filters, etc. 846-5626. ROYAL and CONTEMPORI MOBILE HOMES By—Williams Craft FOR PEOPLE WHO WANT THE BEST FOR LESS ★ ADVANCED MODULAR CONSTRUCTION ★ THE LATEST CONCEPT IN MOBILE HOMES PRICED AS LOW AS — $3695 HUNTERS SPECtAL PORTABLE BUILDINGS—ALL SIZES CONNELL PORTABLE BUILDING CO. (Open Sundays .(1:00 to 6:00) 704 Texas Ave. 823-8709 • Watch Repairs • Jewelry Repair • Diamond Senior Rings • Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-5816 Rentals-Sales-Service TYPEWRITERS Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines Smith-Corona Portables CATES TYPEWRITER CO 909 S. Main 822-6000 THE BATTALION Friday, December 5, 1969 College Station, Texas Page 3 AP News Analysis Alleged Massacre by GIs: Could Americans Do It? EDITOR’S NOTE—Allega tions that American GIs mas sacred South Vietnamese civil ians during a raid on a village complex last year have stunned the United States. How could it happen? is the most frequently asked question. In the following analysis, John T. Wheeler, who reported the war in Vietnam for the Associated Press for several years, gives an insight into the conditions of a strange war in which anything can hap pen. By John T. Wheeler Associated Press Writer To try to understand the al leged massacre by American GIs of civilians at My Lai it is necessary also to understand the atmosphere of a war which has led many U.S. fighting men to feel they are as much at war against Vietnam as for it. While the communiques speak of battles involving companies and battalions—the clash of pro fessional soldiers doing their grim job—each GI carries with him the certain knowledge that in any village there may be men, women, and even children who are also the enemy, waiting for the time NOW SHOWING SHOWTIMES 1:10 - 2:46 - 4:30 - 6:10 8:00 p. m. - 9:45 “FANNY HILL” (Sweden Style) MIDNITE FROLIC SAT. NITE 12:00 P. M. ‘HARD MAN IS GOOD TO FINE” SNEAK SUNDAY 8:00 P. M. PALACE Brtjian 2'8$79 NOW SHOWING Walt Disney’s “DARBY O’GILL, & THE LITTLE PEOPLE’ LAST 2 NITES 7:15 - 9:15 p. m. “EASY RIDER” SAT. MATINEE 1:30 P. M. Paul Newman In “PVT. WAR OF HARRY FRILL” & Lee Marvin In ‘SHACK OUT ON 101” CIRCLE TONITE & SATURDAY At 6:30 p. m. “99 WOMEN” At 8:30 p. m. “COLD DAY IN THE PARK” ADDED ATTRACTION SAT. “THEY CAME TO ROB LAS VEGAS” With Elke Sommers i 1 . 1 : &i: a . hc.'^rTT , '-.'i UMH ukOfkl/VfAGS IRfl WEST SIDE AT 6:30 P. M. ‘CHANGE OF HABIT” With Elvis Presley At 8:30 p. m. John Wayne In “HELL FIGHTERS” EAST SIDE AT 6:30 P. M. “WILD BUNCH” At 8:30 p. m. “HEART IS THE LONELY HUNTER” and place to attack him. Brutality, and indifference to human life, are commonplace in Vietnam. Even the disfigurement of dead GIs is common. In Vietnam the killing of civil ians was a practice established by the Viet Cong as a major part of the war long before the first U.S. ground troops were committed in March 1965. By official count, more than 20,000 civilians had been mur dered by that time in enemy ex ecutions aimed at so thoroughly terrorizing the countryside that none would resist. The total now is more than 40,000 including more than 3,000 killed by the en emy in Hue when they held part of that city for 2% weeks. At Hue, the victims were predomi nantly civilians of all ages. Many were killed simply by ty- backs, shoving them into a trench and burying them alive. It was into this conflict that the American troops were plung ed. They had been told to kill the Viet Cong who were bad and woo the peasant who only aided the enemy because he had no choice. Given a chance, the offi cial line went, Vietnam wanted to be free and democratic just like America. But the GIs found a war of sundered families, and divided allegiances to any regime, either Viet Cong or Saigon. There is no front in Vietnam, no rear, no safety. To the GI of a rifle company everyone out side the perimeter can be sus pected of plotting to kill him. In Vietnam the word civilian does no describe noncombatants. It describes dress more certainly than occupation. In Vietnam the GI has plenty of reason for his distrust and fear: Item: U.S. Marines found beg ging children to whom they had been giving food were stealing grenades that were tossed back at the Leathernecks during the night. Item: A U.S. truck was blown up, killing all aboard, on high way 13, called “bloody Route 13” because of the frequency of min ings. GIs from another truck quickly traced out the electrical wires to the detonator and found a young girl still holding the handle. They shot her. The Pentagon says that today’s soldiers are the most sophisticat ed in history. But more than be ing able to operate intricate elec tronic equipment and the like, the GIs in Vietnam also could see at first hand the corruption, the in difference of Vietnamese soldiers to winning the war, the contrast between the poverty in the coun tryside and the comparative wealth of the cities and the way Vietnamese merchants, bar girls and even children selling black market American soft drinks gouged them. Added to this were the deaths and maimings of | friends. Cynicism mixed with an ger rapidly replaced the early idealism among combat troops. Vietnamese were called “gooks” and “slopes” in a way that some times translated as subhuman. No spark sets off a fire unless it falls into combustible mate rial. The sparks that ignite American GIs are snipers, mines and booby traps. The major cause of casualties in Vietnam are mines'and booby traps. Snip ers also are a major factor. The three are all the more hated be cause each is hidden and after the damage is done, there usually is no chance for the American infantrymen to even the score because no enemy can be found. Often intelligence will pinpoint a village as the source of the mine and booby trap makers and snipers. Repeated sweeps through the hamlet turn up little or noth ing except more casualties. And hatred builds up fob the villagers who know the snipers and know where the hidden traps are but don’t tell. Then one day some thing snaps in one or more men. The frustration and fear drives them across that line of civilized conduct that in combat zones is a hazy mark at best. There are indications that these things might have been at work on the men who are ac cused of massacre in My Lai last year. The U.S. Command’s position has been from the beginning that civilians are not to be harmed. But the case for the sanctity of civilian life is weakened by the knowledge that there are South Vietnamese assassination teams —sometimes led by Americans— operating in the countryside kill ing enemy officials, as opposed to soldiers, often in their beds at home, Viet Cong style. And GIs who have searched out a village after American bombers have done their work cannot help but be a bit cynical about orders not to molest civilians. A senior officer in the legal field was asked after a series of murder trials earlier this year what he thought had motivated the Americans involved, all found guilty. He said nearly all the cases he had handled involved villag ers in Viet Cong held areas. When the pressure of fear or hate or some combination of these factors hit the men hard enough, they broke down with a sort of combat fatigue that end ed with slayings. In some cases the same men who have had to stand trial for killing civilians have helped sup port Vietnamese orphanages or become involved in unofficial re lief operations for families made refugees by the war. “In war, everything is realer than real. The capacity for great violence rises to the surface, but so does a capacity for great com passion,” an Army doctor said. “Remember, part of the brutaliz ing men undergo is necessary to their psychological survival. You can’t look war in the face with the kind of emotional responses we use in the states. You would go mad.” RADIO AND TV REPAIRS MOTOROLA TELEVISIONS ZENITH RADIOS & PHONOS KEN’S RADIO AND TV 303 W. 26th 822-5023 XMAS FLIGHTS NEW YORK BRANIFF INTERNATIONAL Special Youth Group Flights Dallas - New York - Dallas $102.00 plus tax BOOK NOW — SPACE LIMITED Memorial Student Center Office . ■ . fours . . . travel