The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, September 17, 1970, Image 4

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    Page 4
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Thursday, September 17, 1970
In Kansas State speech:
Violence-a cancerous disease: Nixon
A CAMBODIAN IN HIS EARLY TEENS with a bandolier
of heavy caliber machinegun ammunition around his small
chest walks with his antique rifle under his arm and the
food for the machinegunner and himself and a canteen in
his left hand. The youngster is with a battalion of Cam
bodian re-inforcements expected to be thrown in against
a mixed force of enemy troops holding out in Srang, 10
miles southwest of Phnom Penh.
SST pollution said
to be minor problem
WASHINGTON UP) — The De
partment of Transportation con
cedes in a confidential report to
the White House that the much-
disputed supersonic transport may
have some harmful effects on the
environment. But it says they
would be minor.
The document presented to the
President’s Council on Environ
mental Quality terms the still un
built SST an insignificant polluter
but adds: “In a few areas addi
tional research is needed to in
crease confidence that large scale
SST operations will not signifi
cantly affect the environment.”
The report says more research
in particular is needed on tem
perature increases that would be
caused by water vapor and ex
haust from the 1,800-mile-an-hour
aircraft.
The report concedes airport
noise from the SST would be
higher than desired and that oc
cupants would receive radiation
doses greater than persons flying
in subsonic jets at lower altitudes.
But compensating factors are
offered in both cases.
Because of the SST’s steep rate
of climb, the report said, over
all community noise should be
no higher than from existing jets.
Pollution from the SST will be
a significant issue when the Sen
ate votes later this fall on an ad
ditional $290 million for develop
ing a prototype plane. The House
approved the appropriation by an
unexpectedly slim margin.
MANHATTAN, Kan. UP) —
President Nixon, warning in a
campus speech against condoning
violence as a political tactic, call
ed Wednesday for “an uncompro
mising stand against those who
reject the rules o zed con
duct.”
“The time has come for us to
recognize that violence and ter
ror have no place in a free so
ciety, whoever the perpetrators
and whatever their purported
cause,” said Nixon.
He described as a “cancerous
disease” the nation’s spreading
incidents of bombings, attacks on
policemen, campus violence and
aircraft hijacks.
A standing-room crowd esti
mated at 15,000, mainly students
and faculty, jammed Aheam
Fieldhouse at Kansas State Uni
versity and gave Nixon a thun
derous reception, and long ova
tions at various points. A small
number of local officials and
other dignitaries also were pres
ent.
About 40 or 50 hecklers in the
balcony, mainly young people,
shouting “End the war!” catcalls
and a few obscenities, were over
whelmed by ringing applause.
Nixon’s 20-minute speech was
the first in this year’s Alfred M.
Landon lectures on public issues,
honoring the 83-year-old former
Kansas governor and unsuccess
ful Republican presidential can
didate in 1936. The President was
accompanied by his wife.
“We must take an uncompro
mising stand against those who
reject the rules of civilized con
duct and of respect for others—
those who would destroy what is
right in our society and whose
actions would do nothing to right
what is wrong,” Nixon told his
campus audience.
“In a system that provides
the means for peaceful change,
no cause justifies violence in the
name of change,” he said.
Nixon also warned that quali
ty education is threatened by ter
rorizing assaults of “small bands
of destructionists that have been
allowed to impose their own rules
of arbitrary force.”
He said, “It is time for re
sponsible university and college
administrators, faculty and stu
dent leaders to stand up and be
counted. Only they can save high
er education in America. It can
not be saved by government.”
At that point he departed from
his prepared text and interjected:
“If we turn only to government
to save it, then government will
move in and run the colleges and
universities. So the place to save
it is here among the college fac
ulty and administrators, and the
student leaders.”
He declared, “Those who bomb
universities, who ambush police
men, who hijack airplanes and
hold their passengers hostage, all
share in common not only a con
tempt for human life but also a
contempt for those elemental de
cencies on which a free society
rests—and they deserve the con
tempt of every American who
values decencies.”
Nixon said four recent airline
hijackings by Palestinian guer
rillas “sent shock waves of alarm
around the world at the spread
ing disease of violence and ter
ror and its use as a political
tactic.”
He said the “same cancerous
disease has been spreading here
in the United States,” and men
tioned the recent bombing of a
University of Wisconsin build
ing, the gunpoint disruption of a
California courtroom and killing
of its judge, the ambushing of a
policeman and the vandalizing
of a Nobel Prize winner’s cancer
experiments.
“America at its best has stood
steadfastly for the rule of law
among nations. But we cannot
stand successfully for the rule
of law abroad unless we respect
the rule of law at home. A na
tion that condones blackmail and
terror at home can hardly stand
as the example in putting an end
to international piracies or ten
sions that could explode into war,”
Nixon declared.
He said there always have been
those who chose violence or inti
midation to get what they wanted.
What is new, he said, is their
numbers “and the extent of pass
ive acquiescence or even fawning
approval that in some fashionable
circles has become the mark of
being ‘with it.’ ”
And the President warned that
what “corrodes a society even
more deeply than violence itself
is the acceptance of violence, the
condoning of terror, the excusing
of inhuman acts in a misguided
effort to accommodate the com
munity’s standards to those of
the violent few.”
SUMMER
—^ ^ ^
mu
ENTIRE STOCK OF SUMMER CLOTHING
REDUCED
OFF
REGULAR PRICE
o
COATS
Reg. Price
$39.95
SALE PRICE
$ 23 97
DRESS & SPORT
SHIRTS
Reg. Price
$7.00
NOW
$420
ALSO 40% OFF
• Knit Shirts
• Walking Shorts
• Ties
• Swim Wear
SLACKS
and
DRESS PANTS
Reg. $11.00
Price
NOW ONLY
$*60
6
THE EXCHANGE STORE
66 Serving Texas Aggies Since 1907"
BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
. . per word
additional day
One day
4^ per word each ,
Minimum charge—75tf
Classified Display
$1.00 per column inch
pel
each insertion
DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
FOR RENT
RENT A HOME
TRINITY GARDEN
DUPLEXES
• 2 Bedrooms
• 1% Baths
• Central Heat & Air
• Fully Carpeted & Draped
• All Electric Kitchens
• Attached Garage with Washer
and Dryer Connections
• Privately Fenced Back Yard
• 1 Block from Elementary
School
• 3 Blocks from Proposed High
School (Fall ’71)
For Rental Information
846-3988 9tfn
8 M projector and films for rent
Den (next to Loupot’s).
—A fir u ie
136tfn
WORK WANTED
Would like to baby-sit. 846-9727.
6tfn
Tennis racket restringing and
nylon and gut. Call 846-4477.
supplies
123tfn
Custom Bookbinding, Plastic Spi
ral Binding, and Gold Stamping
of Books, Journals, Theses,
Dissertations, and Reports.
UNIVERSAL BINDERY
311 Church Street,
College Station — 846-3840
llltfn
Typing, full time. Notary Public, Bank-
Americard accepted, 823-6410 or 823-3838.
lOtfn
TYPING, electric. Close to campus. Expe
rienced. Reasonable. 846-2934. Hfn
Typing. Electric, symbols, experienced.
846.8165. 132tfn
HELP WANTED
Day work and baby-sitting. 1 thru 5
p. m., Monday thru Thursday. 823-5159.
10t2
STUDENTS ! $3.00 plus per hour. Apply
Ramada Inn. 3:00 p. m. or 8:00 p. m.
today. No phone call please. Mr. Smith.
9t2
For set up and installation for mobile
homes. Will consider two or three day
week man. Inquire in person, Nelson
Mobile Home, 811 South Texas, College
Station. 9tfn
INTERESTED IN MAKING $50 to $75
PER WEEK WORKING OWN HOURS.
CALL 846-4781 BETWEEN 6 AND 7 P. M.
9t4
Students work full or part-time. $3 per
hour guaranteed and chances that a car
and scholarship are being offered. For
information and interviews, call 823-1236
or 823-0106. 133t30
WANTED
Female roommate to share two bedroom
duplex. Call Taffi, 846-9036 after 5. 9tfn
Guitar in good condition. Prefer Yama
ha. Hohner, Greco, or Gaya. 823-0632. 9t4
WE BUY ALMOST ANYTHING—AGGIE
DEN (next to Loupot’s). 135tfn
W
tape
of valu
e buy magazines, pocket books, tapes,
decks, etc. We buy almost anything
'alue—Aggie Den (next to Loupot’s).
135tfn
We buy used magazines, pocket books,
playboys,—Aggie Den. 135tfn
TRANSMISSIONS
REPAIRED & EXCHANGED
Completely Guaranteed
Lowest Prices
HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION
33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874
DR. G. A. SMITH
Optometrist
Specializing in eye
examination & contact lenses
DIAL 822-3557
DOWNTOWN BRYAN
WHITE AUTO STORES Bryan
and College Station can save you
up to 40% on auto parts, oil,
filters, etc. 846-5626.
Rentals-Sales-Service
TYPEWRITERS
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
Smith-Corona Portables
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO
909 S. Main 822-6000
CHILD CARE
Child care with experience; need new
recruita. 846-6536. 183tfr
HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN-
TER, 3400 South College, State Licenied.
823-8626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn
Child care in my home by the week,
nights, and weekends by appointment.
Excellent facilities, playground equipment,
registered nurse in charge. 846-3928. 132121
SPECIAL NOTICE
BILL’S TOP SHOP
SEAT COVERS
VINYL TOPS
Installation
Repairs
RECONDITIONING
AUTO CARPETS
HEADLINERS
1008 W. 25th, Bryan
822-4918
9t4
HORSES
BREAKING-TRAINING
FOR
Riding—Roping
Cutting—Harness
Barrel Racing
REGISTERED QUARTERHORSE
STUD SERVICE
Horses Boarded and Stabled
By Day Or Month
Reasonable Rates - Modern Facilities
SHELTON’S
HORSE TRAINING FARM
MILLICAN, TEXAS
TRAINER—J. M. SHELTON
MAILING ADDRESS
RT. 3. BOX 101-C
NAVASOTA, TEXAS 77868
Service For All
Chrysler Corp. Cars
Body Work — Painting
Free Estimates
HALSELL MOTOR COMPANY, INC.
Dodge Sales and Service Since 1922
1411 Texas Ave. — 823-8111
Female students invited to the Aggie
Den - from 8 a. m. till midnight, 7 days
a week. 136tfn
Maggies invited to the Aggie Den - Come
join the fun - open 8 a. m. till midnight,
7 days a week. 135tfn
Aggies 1 - Bring your date to the Aggie
Den and enjoy billiards and pin-ball—Ag
gie Den. 135tfn
Ladies invited to the Aggie Den - Get
up a party and come enjoy the Aggie
Den, 307 University. 136tfn
Attention personnel of A&M University.
Wood’s Furniture Center, 800 Texas Av
enue, Telephone 823-0947. This retail fur
niture outlet offers you the finest in home
furnishings at prices that you can’t afford
to miss. Our motto is "We will not be
undersold.’’ The mark of excellency. Wood’s
fabulous Furniture Center, Bryan, Texas.
135tl8
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must arrive in the Office
of Student Publications before deadline of
1 p.m. of the day proceeding publication.
It is now time for all Corps Accounts,
Civilian Government Organizations, Depart
mental and Professional Clubs, Hometown
and International Clubs, Honor Societies
MSC Advised Account, Sports Clubs, Stu
dent Body Governing Organizations, and
Service Organizations to apply for Official
Recognization by the University, at the
Student Finance Center, MSC, 8-12, 1-4,
Mon. - Fri. Deadline October 1, 1970. 3tl6
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3406 S. College 823-8051
GM 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
• Watch Repairs
• Jewelry Repair
• Diamond Senior
Rings
• Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
Jewelers
North Gate 846-5816
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
Tapes, tapes, 8 track - brand nn,
guaranteed perfect - latest couatry wrt
ern, rock - soul — The very late»t rcleuft
all artists — Fantastic prices — mljr(l,II
each — Tell your friends about thiidal-
Aggie Den. Wi
Racquel Welch posters - new rebut
beautiful - also many new red ho: postiti
arriving daily - Come see—Aggie Em Hi
PARAPSYCHOLOGY. Forming small
group of ACTIVELY interested to scien
tifically study and report on the paranor
mal. Mark Worley. P. O. Box 3156 CS. 7t6
Aggie Den open from 8 a- m. till mid
night, 7 days each week. Aggie Den (next
to Loupot’s). 135tfn
FOR SALE
PENNEYS
Downtown Bryan
Mens Sport Coat
SALE
Thru Saturday Only
Reg. $39.95
year around weights
Now $33.99
-J
Frigidaire air-conditioner, 220 volti, I
ton $76.00. Call before 6 at 8 23.036!, Ill
Gold Opel GT 1969. $2400. Cill SMI
after 6.
DESK AND CHAIRS
Office - Study - Secretaral
New and Used
Sacrifice While They Last
KRAFT FURNITURE CO.
Downtown Bryan St!
Girlie films - Beaver - 8M bl»tk ui
whites - 200 foot rolls—regularly l!)i
per roll, new 3 rolls for $26.00. LiitM
supply—Aggie Den.
AKC Belgian sheepdog,
offer. 846-6747.
$100 or la
12 x 60 mobile home. Call 822-1162. itli
TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Surfboards, Posters, Leather, and Mort
Open Daily
6 to 10
Thursday
10 to 9
29th at Stillmeadow in Wee Villsge
846-0324 itll
POSTERS - POSTERS - POSTERS
POSTERS. The kind you like-Aggie De
(next to Loupot’s). IJSiR
4 and 8 track tapes, 5 for $15.00 guin
teed—Aggie Den (next to Loupot's). l!il
Bumper stickers - Bumper sticken •
Bumper stickers - Bumper stickers • Al
kinds — Aggie Den (next to Loupofii
13Wi
Tape decks, 4 and 8 track tapes, cassitli
tapes, radios, cassette tape players. Joinld
ue sticks, girlie magazines, girlie film
pocket books, party albums, record albuw,
playboy pin-up posters, watches, T.V)
Almost anything. All at real LarjliK
—Aggie Den (next to Loupot's). ISillt
Jointed cue sticks from $9.96 to $16,W-
good selection—Aggie Den (next to I/«'
pot’s).
135ll«
Ann-Margaret Vietnam photos in liviif
color - Fantastic collectors item - Limilf
supply—Aggie Den (next to Loupot'il,
136tli
—
Girlie magazines, and pocket booki il
60% discount - Don’t pay more! Buy you
magazines at Vi price at Aggie Den. ISStft
For sale by owner. Two bedroom dupta
near University. Excellent investmtnt it
$14,600. Call 846-6231. lS2t!l
Japanese made electric guitar. Tire
pickups, vibrator and case. Worth o«t
$100.00 but selling for $65. 846-2803 I29f
RUMMAGE SALE
Friday, Sept. 18, 3 to 6 p. m. Saturday,
Sept. 19, 7 :30 to 12 noon. A&M United
Methodist Church. College Station. Spon
sored by the Women’s Society of Christian
Service. 10tl
FOUND
~~
White, long-haired cat. 846 6566. Ill
TROPHIES PLAQUES
Engraving Service
Ask About Discounts
Texas Corn Exchange, Inc.
1018 S. Texas 822-5121
Bob Boriskie ’65
COINS SUPPLIES
SOSOLIKS
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
AH Makes B&W TV Repairs
713 S. MAIN 822-2133
Havoline, Amalie,
Conoco, t
34c qt.
-EVERYDAY-
We stock all local major brands,
Where low oil prices originate,
Quantity Rights Reserved
Wheel Bearings - Exhausts
System Parts, Filters,
Water and Fuel Pumps.
Almost Any Part Needed
25-40% Off List
Brake Shoes $3.60 ex.
2 Wheels — many cars
We Stock
EELCO
EDELBROCK
HURST
MR GASKET
CAL CUSTOM
Other Speed Equipment
Starters - Generators
Most $13.95 each
Your Friedrich Dealer
Joe Faulk Auto Parts
220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas
JOE FAULK ’32
24 years in Bryan