The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 29, 1970, Image 4

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DISCOUNT MEAL
COUPON BOOKS ARE ON
SALE AT THE FOOD
SERVICES MANAGER’S
OFFICE:, MSC
MONDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
BROILED SALISBURY
STEAK
W/SAUTEED ONIONS
Choice of two
vegetables
Rolls - Butter
Tea or Coffee
$0.99
TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
BAKED MEAT LOAF
WITH TOMATO SAUCE
Rolls - Butter
Tea or Coffee
and
Choice of
any two vegetables
$0.99
WEDNESDAY
EVENING
SPECIAL
CHICKEN FRIED STEAK
WITH CREAM GRAVY
Rolls - Butter
Tea or Coffee
and
Choice of
any two vegetables
$0.99
THURSDAY
EVENING
SPECIAL
ITALIAN CANDLELIGHT
DINNER
ITALIAN SPAGHETTI
Served with
Spiced Meat Balls & Sauce
Parmesan Cheese
Tossed Green Salad
Choice of Salad Dressing
Hot Garlic Bread
Tea or Coffee
$0.99
FRIDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
OCEAN
CATFISH FILET
Tarter Sauce
Cole Slaw
Grandma’s Cornbread
Rolls - Butter
Tea or Coffee
and
Choice of
any two vegetables
$0.99
SATURDAY
SPECIAL
NOON AND
EVENING
GULF SHRIMP
Cocktail Sauce
French Fried Potatoes
Cole Slaw
Rolls - Butter
Tea or Coffee
$0.99
SUNDAY SPECIAL
NOON AND
EVENING
ROAST TURKEY
DINNER
Served With
Cranberry Sauce
Cornbread Dressing
Rolls - Butter
Tea or Coffee
Giblet Gravy
and your choice of any
two vegetables
$0.99
For your protection we
purchase meats, fish and
poultry from Government
inspected plants.
“Quality First”
THE BATTALION
Pag-e 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, October 29, 1970
Speakers report
killed by judge
Small children may find
halloween show scary
WASHINGTON <A>) _ Public
distribution of an official House
report on so-called radical campus
speakers was prohibited today by
a federal judge.
“The report of the House Com
mittee for Internal Security is
without any proper legislative
purpose,” U. S. District Judge
Gerhard Gesell said in his ruling,
“and infringes on the Constitu
tional rights of individuals named
therein.”
The American Civil Liberties
Union, which won the permanent
injunction against publication of
the official report at public ex
pense, called the decision the first
ever in which a court restricted
Congress' authority over its own
reports.
The House committee report
lists 65 speakers it identifies as
members of militant, radical or
Communist-oriented organizations
and concludes the campus speak
ing circuit is a significant source
of financing for revolutionary
and disorderly activities.
“There are undoubtedly indi
viduals who would destroy our
institutions and form of govern
ment,” Gesell said in his ruling.
“If any of them are listed in this
report, our Constitution neverthe
less preserves their right to speak
even though their acts may be
restrained.”
an increasing tendency by Con
gress to investigate “for expo
sures sake” and said he hopes
Congress on its own will limit
its investigations to subjects di
rectly related to legislation.
Gesell’s injunction is only
against the U. S. public printer
and only prohibits publication of
the House report at public ex
pense.
The judge indicated in open
court last week that he could not
realistically accept the ACLU’s
request that congressmen and
everyone else also be enjoined
against reprinting the official
House report on their own.
The Halloween show at the
Architecture Building has been
rated “scary.”
Parents with small children
may find some of the 60 student
exhibits a bit too realistic, noted
a spokesman for the sponsoring
College of Architecture and En
vironmental Design.
The exhibits were opened to
the public Wednesday night and
attracted a large crowd.
A repeat performance begins
at 7 tonight and continues until
10.
★ ★ ★
Reading lab offers
help to children
The TAMU Reading Labora
tory will be offering diagnostic
testing services to children who
demonstrate reading difficulties
during the month of November.
Parents who are interested in
having their children tested and
tutored are urged to make an ap
pointment with Dr. Joseph Ilika,
Director of the Reading Labora
tory staff, Mrs. Avery Goodgame
and Mrs. Mary Ann Cathey, grad
uate assistants; and Mrs. Jo Ann
Stringfellow, secretary. The
Reading Laboratory phone num
ber is 845-1510.
A committee spokesman said
“the case will be appealed and
the matter undoubtedly be
brought before the House when
Congress reconvenes, but beyond
that there will be no further
comment until the injunction has
been examined and brought to
the attention of the committee
chairman.”
Students, faculty plan
to present papers
Seven faculty members and stu
dents from Texas A&M Univer
sity’s Center for Tectonophysics
will present papers at the an
nual meeting Nov. 11-13 of the
Geological Society of America in
Milwaukee.
The diagnostic services will ^)e
followed by tutoring sessions dur
ing the spring semester. Schol
arships will be available on the
basis of financial need for both
testing and tutoring sessions.
★ ★ ★
Rep. Richard H. Ichord, D-Mo.,
chairman of the House committee,
earlier announced he wants to
challenge a court right to restrict
publication of an official report.
The judge said there has been
ACLU lawyer Lawrence Speiser
said he will not appeal the rul
ing, even though it does not grant
all he asked. He said he will wait
to see what Ichord and the gov
ernment do.
The group includes Dr. J. W.
Handin, the center’s director; Dr.
M. Friedman, Dr. John M. Logan,
Dr. D. W. Stearns, G. M. Sowers,
H. S. Swolfs and Dr. R. C. Wilson.
Swolfs is a graduate student and
Wilson recently completed re
quirements for his Ph.D. degree.
Handin and Logan also will
present a paper at the 12th Sym
posium on Rock Mechanics at
Rolla, Mo., Nov. 16-18.
Five veterinarians
to give programs
Five Texas A&M veterinarians
will present programs Saturday
at the Texas Veterinary Medicine
Association Feedlot Seminar in
Amarillo.
★ ★ ★
Sponsors expect approximately
60 persons to attend the Villa Inn
meetings. The program is open
to the general public.
Representing A&M’s College of
Veterinary Medicine are Drs. R.
B. England, W. J. Kilpatrick, H.
T. Barron, D. V. Hanselka and E.
W. Baldwin.
ROSES
We Specialize In Them—
Red, yellow, pink tropicana
We have them.
AGGIELAND FLOWER &
GIFT SHOPPE
Member F.T.D. for out of town orders.
209 University Dr. 846-5825
J. C. (Jim) Harris
THE BUG SHOP, Inc.
1911 Sa College Ave.
Bryan, Texas 77801
Phone 822-5383
Bryan's Leading Independent Volkswagen Service
Fish-Shorthorn game
will aid youngsters
The treatment and rehabilita
tion of children with disabilities
from nature or accidents will be
aided with proceeds of the 1970
Shrine Benefit Football Game.
It is being sponsored by the
Brazos Valley Shrine Club and
features the University of Texas
Shorthorns versus the Texas
Aggie Fish, Nov. 20 at 7:30 p.m.
on Kyle Field.
Vice President Ken Grimes is
heading all arrangements and has
appointed benefit game working
committees.
The exciting halftime activities
will include marching band, pre
cision drill, clown and oriental
entertainment units.
The local game is one of about
40 being played over the United
States to cure disabled children
of which the East-West game is
the big one, Grimes said.
★ ★ ★
Forestry Collection
presented to A&M
A unified and annotated col
lection of the first scientific books,
bulletins, and articles on Amer
ican forestry, range science, ecol
ogy and botany has been pre
sented to A&M.
The collection is the gift of
Dr. and Mrs. E. J. Dyksterhuis
of 3807 Oaklawn in Bryan.
Dyksterhuis was named profes
sor Emeritus when he recently
retired as a member of the Range
Science Department.
John B. Smith, director of li
braries, said the professor's ma
terials are housed in the Special
Collections Room of the main
library.
He said the collection is valued
at more than $3,000 on the used
book market as determined by in
dependent appraisal.
It 's
CA*/
tUjE/
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Texas A&M University
‘Radical - liberals’
Spiro’s topic again
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. UP> —
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew
stumped the deep South on Wed
nesday, making fresh attacks on
television news commentators and
“radical liberals.”
“One word to the supersensi
tive, self-anointed, supercilious
electronic barons of opinion,”
Agnew said in remarks prepared
for a Republican rally in this
steel center.
“They may continue to pontif
icate, in living color, between 6
and 7:30 each evening, but the
American people are going to
send their political pals packing
— the radical-liberal office hold
ers grown arrogant in their
power to frustrate the popular
will.”
The vice president was appear
ing in Birmingham on behalf of
the Republican candidate for lieu
tenant governor, Bob French, and
GOP candidates for the U. S.
House of Representatives.
Former Gov. George C. Wal
lace, who also has been a critic
of the news media, is the Demo
cratic candidate for governor. He
has no Republican opponent but
candidates of other parties, in
cluding Dr. John Cashin, a Ne
gro, are running against him.
Earlier touching down for a
half-hour rally at Albany, Ga.,
Agnew told some 2,500 persons
gathered amid dozens of big
American flags that the “radi
cal liberal crowd is behind the
wheel of the national Democratic
The Agj
iome debut
he Rice O’
:30 p.m.
A&M \ri
rin this se
n the yea
The Fish
laylor 12-
bus.
“They are the ones who sta
the party and decide where it
goes and the good Democrsti
who oppose the radical liben!
philosophy are only passenger;
being taken for a ride.”
Southern Democrats, the vis
president said, have had a “rougl
and frightening” ride for manj
years and “the road ahead a
hardly encouraging.”
But, in both Albany, where he
was appearing for Republic
congressional candidates ani
GOP gubernatorial nominee 1
Suit, and in Birmingham, tkt
vice president mentioned St
preme Court appointments as la
had in trips earlier this weekti
North and South Carolina.
He said in Albany that Pres
dent Nixon was “dead set" ds
spite two rebuffs to get a Soutt
erner on the Supreme Court, h
Birmingham, he said U. S. Stt
ate rejection of Southern nomi
nees Clement F. Haynsworth, Ji
and G. Harrold Carswell wes
part of a “congressional gm;
design to block the President;
program for America.’ ’
Agnew also told audience
President Nixon will stand fin
in support of the neighborhod
school concept, in his opposite
to school busing to overcome to
cial imbalance and in his suppcit
of strong anticrime legislation,
Agnew flies to Kansas
Thursday for more campaip-
ing.
Wharton
Hid SMU:
ough Texs
Friday in
Injuries
^ear, pari
ivhere ther
begin w
ew schols
ive guard
Saylor gar
tobert Dei
Voter apathy
(Continued from page 1)
from the governor during the
next two years.”
“Texas is among the five most
populous states and its popula
tion increased 16.8 per cent during
the last decade, a faster growth
than any adjacent state,” Smith
claimed. “The national economy
is not good. We all know that.
Yet, sound one-party leadership
here in Texas has enabled our
state to fare relatively well.”
He said that “Texas has en
joyed one of the nation’s lowest
tax burdens at both state and
local levels. In 1968, the average
Texan paid only $131 in state
taxes — $52 below the national
average of $183 per capita.”
Smith is counting on “increased
revenue from a vigorous economy
and higher per capita income” to
prevent new taxes while Eggers
has endorsed an Economy Com
mission to recommend more ef
ficient and economic methods.
Eggers also opposes the exten
sion of the sales tax to food and
medicine, a move that Smith en
dorsed in 1969.
the key government agencies'
which have led to the dismisai
or resignation of excellent ai
ministrators. Eggers cited tlf
dismissal of Frank Miskell
commissioner of consumer creiil
and the resignation of Dr. Ai
'63 Merced'
iler servic
onomy, |I2(
DOA
Excellent -w
benefit*. P
ies necea
iversity,
tration Bu
AN E
“The government of Texas is
a big business and expenses which
have been allowed to develop
virtually on their own need re
viewing,” Eggers said. “I think
an economy commission is in
order. Hundreds of millions of
dollars have been saved for tax
payers in Ohio and California by
such commissions and the same
thing will work for Texas.”
Eggers has also endorsed con
stitutional revision, court reor
ganization and an “ombudsman”
to handle citizens’ complaints
against the government.
He has strongly criticized
“politically motivated meddling in
Duplex, tw
Hughes as director of child an; st me a n p t art ^ <
adolescent services for the Stat
Department of Mental Health an;
Mental Retardation.
Smith has called Eggers “til!
most inexperienced and uninfont-
ed man either political party k
ever offered the people as a cat
didate for governor” and hi
periodically accused him of "mi
knowing what he is doing raos
of the time.”
Criticized by Smith for m
speaking out on increased intereS
rates and the decreased oil (it
pletion allowance, Eggers
that his position with the treasurj
department had prevented hi
from taking a stand, but added
that other Texas Republicans pre
vented an even greater cut in tie
allowable.
“I know that Gov. Smith did
not even appear in Washington
to fight for the oil and gas in
dustry as other governors did, 1
he said.
The gubernatorial campaign ha;
failed to develop as a hotly con
tested race this year, although
the outcome is still in doubt. Each
candidate has conducted a leis
urely, low-key campaign and tkt
major issue now seems to be that
of party and personality.
Unless either Bentsen or Smitk
introduces a vitalized issue in the
waning days of the campaign,
the Democratic party may be in
trouble in Texas. Bad weather on
election day may mean the end
of the one-party system in Texas,
By JOHN (
Assistant S
m
mean y<
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