I THE BATTALION THURSDAY, APRIL 24. I960 Page 7 Need a study break? See a movie By JAN EVANS Campus Reporter For students who might need a wak from studies for final exams, J! multi-media department of the “"line C. Evans Library will show free films Monday through next week. Segments of the senes In Search , will be shown every hour between 10a.m. and 9p.m. in Room JlBofthe library Monday through Wednesday, and a film on car care will be shown Thursday. Susan Lytle of the maps depart ment said this might be a bad time to present the film series, but “we wanted to go ahead and try it to see if it works.” Lytle said the multi-media department will try to get an idea of student interest in having free films from response to the series next week. Lytle said the department is hoping for student suggestions to de termine when and what programs will be shown next fall. She said they hope to show film one week each semester. Lytle said the series is also to help generate interest in the multi-media department, which was new last fall. The department has instructional slides, film strips, video tapes and a small number of 16-mm motion pic tures which students can check out. Besides instructional films, stu- Reagan s confident despite Bush victory United Press International HOUSTON — George Bush’s win in the Pennsylvania primary might as well not have occurred for all the effect it had on Ronald Reagan’s cam paign Wednesday. Reagan campaigned in Waco be fore heading to Houston for a League ofWomen Voters debate with Bush. At a Waco airport rally he fed Dr. Pepper to Baylor University’s mas cot bear, asked a Jimmy Carter lookalike if he could visit the Oval Office to measure the carpet and re ceived a smeared lipstick kiss from a majorette. In his Tuesday night news confer ence after learning Bush had won the popular vote in Pennsylvania, Reagan said it didn’t matter. “I believe I’m going to win the nomination,” he said. “Delegates are the name of the game.” Outstanding seniors picked Two seniors from the College of Liberal Arts were presented awards Wednesday at the liberal arts faculty 'meeting. Karen Crane and Mike Huddles ton, both political science majors, were named outstanding seniors by the Liberal Arts Student Council on the basis of their academic excell ence and their contributions and ser vice to Texas A&M Univerity. Crane, from Rosenberg, has been a distinguished student each semes ter at Texas A&M and is a member of Cap and Gown. She helped organize the Political Science Society and the Political Science Honor Society, Pi Sigma Alpha. She will attend law school at the University of Texas next fall. Recently selected to Who’s Who Among Students in American Col lege and Universities, Huddleston will attend law school at Southern Methodist University in the fall. He received the Gathright Award as a junior at Texas A&M and is vice pres ident of both Pi Sigma Alpha and the Political Science Society. The Reagan campaign estimated it had 90 percent of the delegates needed toward the 998 necessary to win the nomination and predicted their candidate won 50 of the 83 Pennsylvania delegates. Reagan said he believed his nomi nation was assured and an aide said any skeptics will change their minds by May 6, after the Indiana, Texas, Tennessee and North Carolina Re publican primaries have been held. By that date, said Richard Wirth- lin, Reagan’s chief of strategy and planning, the former California gov ernor will have enough delegates “so that if there’s any doubt in anyone’s mind who’s going to win the nomina tion, those doubts should be erased.” Reagan said it would have been “nice” to have won the “beauty con test,” but he denied that the loss was any indication he was losing his appeal to the important blue collar vote. Because Pennsylvania is not a crossover state, in which Democrats can vote on the Republican ballot, there was no chance to win the kind of blue collar support he saw in Illi nois and Wisconsin. Wirthlin said there were no plans to change strategy in the industrial' states of Ohio and Michigan. He said ?£KWG CHiKCSC STUDENT SPECIAL SPECIAL COMBINATION DINNER NOON BUFFET — MON. thru FRI. SUNDAY EVENING BUFFET All You Can Eat! 5:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. OPEN DAILY — 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. 1313 S. 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Lytle said the department would like students to stop by to see the catalogue and say what they are interested in seeing in future films series. The multi-media department is on the second floor of the library ans is open from 8 a. m. to 11 p.m.. The films to be shown next week are: Monday, “In Search of Big Foot," Tuesday, “In Search of Pyra mid Secrets; Wednesday,^ In Search of Ancient Astronauts;” and Thursday, “Car Care: Starting Tips ” Corsican nationalists set bombs in Paris RING DANCE PHOTOS WILL BE TAKEN BEGINNING 12:00 NOON, 8AT.; APRIL 26 IN THE M8C LOUNGE PHOTO PACKAGE TICKETS NOW 0\ SALE M8C TICKET OFFICE Save $1.00 by buying picture ticket in advance University Studio 115 College Main 846-8019 the popular vote was more important during the beginning of the race, be fore there is a clear frontrunner. Wirthlin and other Reagan aides said there was no way Bush could win the nomination. Reagan spent part of the afternoon in briefings with advisors after an in terview with a Dallas television sta tion in which he reiterated his con tention the United States “would be destroyed” in a nuclear war with the Soviet Union. He said the United States would not have “a retaliatory power of any consequence” if the Soviets should strike first and said the Soviets would have enough power for a second strike “even if we had enough to throw at them.” “We’re behind them in both con ventional and strategic weapons as a result of this administration’s cutting back on our defensive power, and the gap is widening,” Reagan said. The only reason the United States is not susceptible to military black mail, Reagan said, is a Soviet desire to avoid war. “But I do believe they want world conquest,” he said. •M T-'* United Press International PARIS — Nine bombs, planted by Corsican nationalists, exploded Wednesday at travel agencies, stores and government buildings in Paris and the port of Nice. Three persons were slightly in jured from flying glass at one of the seven explosions in Paris. No one was injured in the two bomb attacks in Nice. All the attacks were claimed by the Corsican National Liberation Front in telephone calls to French news media. The Front seeks independ ence for Corsica, which has been under French rule for 212 years. In Paris, five explosions came shortly after midnight in working class neighborhoods. The worst damage was at an Air France ticket office, where the injuries occurred. The other bombs damaged a travel agency, two post offices and a tax office. About two hours later, two more bombs went off in Paris’ Les Halles shopping center. Nine stores were damaged. Police also discovered two other bombs that failed to go off outside banks in the northern part of the city. In the Mediterrean port of Nice, bombs exploded at both a national and a local tax office. Last year, the Front claimed re sponsibility for more than 100 bomb attacks in Corsica and on the French mainland. French officials consider the Cor sican Front the best organized separ atist movement in France, although they say the group has only a few dozen members. The attacks of violence began in 1975 in Corsica, a 3,367 square-mile island with a population of 250,000. The population, however, has been declining steadily as young Corsi cans leave the island in search of work. The French government has re fused to negotiate with the Front or seriously consider giving Corsica its independence, but has sent them more national funds. 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