HomeMy WebLinkAboutDAAnderson01J I �. 1 . I 1, I
THE BRYANDAILY EAGLE
PAGE 2 Bryan-C.S., Monday, De 2, 1963 VOL. 88 -
Published by the Eagle Printing Co., Inc. Bryan, Texas, daily (except
Saturday). Sund2Y morning Second class postage paid at Bryan, Texas.
I
-
Mrs. Lee J. Rountree, Managirg Editor, 1923-1956
-
MILLS P. WALY,ER
W. M. KELLY President an-I BOB STEWART
secretary- Treasurer General Manater Managing Editor
MARK CAMP13k,LL
R. J - COLE Business Managei A,nd
Vica-President A GenT M�nager Production Supt.
Member ot the Audit Bureiu of Circulation
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MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED P11EES
The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to use for reproduction all dia-
patches credited to it or not otherwise credited to the paper and also all
local news published herein. All rights of reproduction of special dispatches
herein are reserved.
, , ' tori" I
Arl a I
vdwlm�
P 0
rosperity at Home
In this country the competition for job-creating indus-
tries has never been more acute. Cities, states and regions
vie with each other for the rich prizes of new industrial de-
velopment. �
Some areas are clearly compelled to lure new plants
into their midst if they are to make any real dent in chronic
unemployment. The older industries that may long have
served them well have fallen off. Without an infusion from
outside, they are caught in stagnation.
Heavily industrialized Michigan is taking an approach,
however, that may have interesting lessons for most of the
nation.
Right now Michigan is riding high with one of the most
prosperous automobile production years in its history. Last
year also was good. But the state has had its lean periods,
and it no longer gets anything like the major share of the
defense business it once had.
The state's specialists in economic development would
like to recapture some of that business. But they do not
wish to have too great dependence on it.
Nor do they want particularly to lure a flock of new
concerns to Michigan, though plainly they will not bar the
doors to solid enterprises seeking a base in the state.
What they want to do most is encourage the economic
health of businesses already in Michigan.
The experts believe that 90 per cent of Michigan's
economic growth in the decades just ahead will come from
either Michigan-based companies or concerns with major
Michigan branches.
The notion is that if these firms' needs are properly
gauged and attended to, they will stay in the state and
supply the expanding economic foundation it needs to care
for its steadily rising population.
There would seem to be immense good sense in this'
Efforts to attract new plants are thoroughly understand-
able, especially in those places that are today deeply mired.
But the concessions and other luring services represent, in
some ways, discrimination against already established com-
panies.
A Michigan development spet,cialist notes tiiat 1,000
major firms have moved in,lhe T.Taited States i Ole rizk%tj
- - tLve years. . mother 1,000 'p4on Lu lri�ove in 'L., _ - - - -_ - _
years. Any alert area should be busy seeing what it can do
to provide a setting and economic climate which will en-
courage employers to stay around.
Often the old industrial site constricts development,
transportation alignments are outdated, community facili-
ties are inadequate, tax structure is bad.
Michigan has no patent on this approach. It is obvious-
ly a good one and it deserves to be widely copied.
WASHINGTON (M - The pic-
wald
which emerges so far is that of
a crybaby, self-centered, undis-
ciplined, half-educated, a mind
too poor to understand what he
read, and with delusions about
himself.
When the facts are all in, he
may look different. But this ex-
Marine, 24, assassinated after
being charged with killing Pres-
ident John F. Kennedy, was a
nobody who clearly wanted to
be somebody.
It may turn out he was part
of a conspiracy. But the infor-
mation revealed up to this time
indicates the exact opposite. He
called himself a Marxist with-
nut seeming, to understand a
m.,."�i ._Z�L,Gi 1, a �A, f
-
an organizatioft. Oswald was to ' 0
undisciplined to be a good or-
ganization man.
14E BOASTED about the
books he had read, but he nev-
er learned to spell well. He was
dissatisfied with the American
society but never learned how
to do a job well enough to keep
.11
,+"* �'"*' WORLD
I
.
I
SPOTLIG
�,, _....
Red Chinese Frown
On U.S. President
By JOHN RODERICK
Koreans, Johnson is no more
TOKYO 0- Red China,
than a new face at the same old
which refused to say a gener-
window.
ous word about the late John F.
BUT IF THE Communist at-
Kennedy, looks with truculence
titude is sharp and simply etch-
and distaste on the administra-
ed, the outlook of America's
tion of his successor, President
friends and allies in Northeast
Johnson.
Asia is not.
Speaking for the Chinese bloc
Publicly, these nations - Na-
- which includes North Korea,
tionalist China, Japan and South
North Viet Nam, the Pathet Lao
Korea - express confidence
of Laos and the Communist
J o h n s o n will continue Ken-
party of Indonesia - Peking
nedY's foreign program.
calls the new chief executive
But there are private anxieties
reactionary, aggressive and im-
jogged by their special prob-
perialist.
lenis.
For the Chinese and North,
NATIONALIST C h i n a has
-
OUT OUR WAY �
OH, IT'5 ONLY A,
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.
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ANC i F
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PACK MULE! I
I THOU61-IT IT
MAPEME.
6oT jw LA AW'
WA5 ONE 0'7HEM
SUr-E IT
JU5T 5TARTED
ATTACKS OF
WA57HIS
70 UN LOACI T�-1
F-5
HI&H
5UPPLIE5A�4'--
- OM
Al-7 ITUPE
WHO'�5WORT- .
fore he was born, but the evi-
MA%JI`J( My
dence indicates that after he
about his importance. The Rus-
BREA%
- -
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.
HE COMPLAINED to a fami-
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".VPLLIAM_�> a-Z
W PMACY .Iw�,W.�__
NOW-0-m-M-00 ===�
seized on Johnson's reply to
Chiang Kai-shek's cable of con-
dolence, in which the new Presi-
dent assured Chiang, "I firrr�ly
intend to continue the policies
adopted by President Kennedy,
convinced of their wisdom.
The generalissimo, who an-
nounced periodically his inten-
tions of invading the C h i n a
mainland, is left with the unan-
swered question: Will Johnson
go further than K e n n e d y in
thwarting his goal by refusing
U. S. military support?
i a I
problem is continuing military
and economic aid to a new civil-
ian government h e a d e d by
former military strong man
Chung Hee Park. Kennedy in-
sisted on cutting down on direct
aid, shifting to loans instead.
Will relations, somewhat strain-
ed in the past, improve? Only
the months ahead will show.
In Japan, a big trading part-
ner of the United States, busi.
nessmen fear Johnson may be
less than enthusiastic about
Kennedy's free trade policies,
may lean more towards protec-
tionism. That would be a blow
to this exporting nation, and
these same businessmen already
are recommending less depend-
ence on the U. S. market, more
on Europe.
WOMENPAST2
WITH BLADDER IRRITATIO
After 21, common Kidney or Bladder Ir-
ritations affect twice as many women as
men and may make You tense and nervous
from too frequent, burning or itching
urination both day and night. Secondarily,
You may lose sleep and suffer from Head-
aches, Backache and feet old, tired, de-
pressed. In such irritation, CYSTEX
usually brings fast, relaxing comfort by
curbing irritating germs in strong, acid
urine and by analgesic Pain relief. Get
OYSTEX as druggists. Peel better fast. �
it so he could support himself in
a freighter and, unknown to his
this society.
mother but with $1,000 saved up
And while he kept talking of
from his Marine days, went to
a more perfect society, in this
the Soviet Union.
one he skipped out on his rent.
IN MOSCOW he c a 1 1 e d a
He called himself pro-Castro
news conference to announce he
and anti-Castro. He glorified the
was defecting and wanted to be-
Soviet Union and wanted to
come a Soviet citizen. He called
write a book condemning it.
himself a Marxist, said he was
He complained a b o u t the
the youngest in the United
hardships his mother had suf-
States.
fered during the depression, be-
This demonstrated, at least,
fore he was born, but the evi-
that he had some delusions
dence indicates that after he
about his importance. The Rus-
was able to go to work, he con-
sians s e e in e d unimpressed,
tributed little or nothing to her
withheld citizenship, and gave
support.
hi I a job in a factory at Minsk.
.
HE COMPLAINED to a fami-
A wo things happened: He got
ly friend he was out of work
married and became disillusion-
and his wife was expecting their
ed iwith the Soviet Union. The
ldet
sprond biabir f r�vp
1 1 1 110
.
to New OrleanT,q
lol _wwkirig -at -the sarrit
� I -
-_ - -_ C4_4_,;_�
,1,90 aner
-
?0 undisciplined spirit. Per-
first cl-dld, returned to tier home
hap'.� he felt frustrated by being
in Dallas with them, and took
treated as just another worker.
care of them for weeks.
THE FACT THAT he had to
Oswald apparently never con-
four years Tuesday.
tributed a nickel to this wom-
gol to the Soviet Union to un-
an friend of the family for the
derstand how it operated - that
support of his wife and child
there was absolute discipline un-
and second baby but, instead,
der the Communists and disci-
went to Mexico to arrange a trip
pline meant work because the
for himself to Europe.
Communists dislike bums - is
His problem started early, In
'
as good an insight as any into
the very short time he and his
the poor quality of his mind and
mother lived in New York he
his stability.
became such a delinquent in
He was allowed to return to
school he was given a psychi-
this country by the American
atric examination. He was found
government after three years in
to be "wild". Perhaps the delu-
the Soviet U n i o n. Here he
sions showed up then.
bounced around from job to job,
f $10,000 or more a year.
never really competent in any-
AT 17 HE QUIT school to go
thing except the most menial
into the Marines. He didn't do
jobs.
well under the discipline. He
In the meantime he tried to
was court-martialed twice and
call attention to himself as pro-
was in constant conflict with
Castro and anti-Castro. He got
other Marines.
into a television discussion on
He was given a special, hard-
communism and Marxism and
ship discharge so he could go
made a mess of himself.
home and help his mother, who
Foster St., College Station, en-
had been badly injured at her
LAST SEPTEMBER he went
job.
to the Cuban Consulate in Mex-
Instead of staying with his
ico City to get a visa to Cuba
mother to help, he got a job on
and the Soviet Union. When he
-
was told it would take time he
lownstairs before he is a year
stormed out, slamming the door.
ild will turn out a fool.
It's possible Oswald then felt
Pi�i� ROOM I
rejected by both Moscow and
ly Clinton Locy of West Rich -
Cuba. This is also possible ' if
NAOMI returned, and Ruth
he is the man who killed Ken-
the Moabifess, her daughter
nedy, that he decided he would
in law, with her, which re.
single-handedly show the Soviet
turned out of the country of
and Cuban Communists how a
Moab: and they came to Beth-
revolutionist should act by kill-
lehem in the beginning of
ing the President.
barley harvest. (Ruth 1:22.)
He never seemed to under-
Turkeys are polygamous.
stand that the really effective
PRAYER: Merciful Father,
revolutionists - like Lenin, Sta-
too long we have stumbled in
lin, Khrushchev - did not act
darkness, error, and sin. We
singly but as part of an orga-
come to Thee, asking forgive.
nization.
ness, seeking Thy grace. R
They looked upon the individ-
ceiving us, for there is no oth-
ual trying some crime on his
er to whom we can turn. At
own not as a revolutionary but
Bethlehem's manger we kneel
as a romantic. For a Commu-
and behold the Savior of man-
nist there is nothing so deserv-
kind. Grant us salvation
ing of contempt as a romantic.
through Him. Amen.
ried the elephant in the cargo
uccessful."
Phone TA 2-3707 for Classified
I
Children in the Texas Pan-
Biologists from 30 to 60 Tia-
� kk ; "take. the
�
famfly �,.� AA I
.
out tonight
F F
I " . . I
. . I I
- I
And we aren't just "a-squealing" I
either[ Picture the tantalizing aroma .., .... .
of la ing
up "I .... %........", . . . . . . I
through golden-brown meat. oozing
ully, to enlarge available re-
with spicy goodness. Now, picture 1�
I
yourself enjoying one-at Little Pigs, -
-
of course!
Little Plegs
OF AMERICA
Office spa ce on ground floor, Astin
- .1 .
808 VILLIA MARIA ROAD .
Phone TA 2-9475
�
MILITARY MEN
OLMSTED AFB, Pa. - Capt.
Clyde L. Brothers Jr. of Bryan
has received the United States
Air Force Commendation Medal
for meritorious service. Capt.
Brothers, a senior pilot, was cit-
ed for his outstanding perform-
ance of duty while serving as
an aircraft maintenance officer
at Bentwaters RAF Station,
England.
He now is an aircraft main-
teance project officer in the di-
rectorate of maintenance at
Olmsted. The captain, a 1951
graduate of the Tokyo (Japan)
-
American High School, attend-
ed the University of Texas prior
to entering the Air Force in
January 1954. He was commis-
sioned through the Aviation Ca-
det program in 1955. His wife
is the former Sarita Colson,
daughter of Mrs. Winnie Colson,
1208 E. 24th, Bryan.
Major General Frederic H.
Miller, Middletown Air Material
Area commander, made the
presentation.
* * 0
Josephine Jackson, 18, daugh-
ter of Mrs. Nona Robertson,
1020 North Pierce, Bryan, was
sworn into the Women's Air
Force for a period of four years
Nov. 19. 1
According to M-Sgt. Howard
R. Rasmussen, local Air Force
recruiter, Airman Jackson has
been assigned to Lackland Air
Force Base at San Antonio.
Airman Jackson is a 1963
11 �
NEW YORK LIP) - Things a
g ra uaLe of Kemp High School.
olumnist might never know if
Frankie Mae Morris, daugh-
e didn't open his mail:
ter of Mrs. Estella Morris, 2108
As more of us are born and
West Hwy 21, Bryan, enlisted in
iore of us live longer, Ameri-
the United States Air Force for
ans seem to be getting both
the Officers Training School
Ider and younger. By 1970, it
program Monday.
; estimated, half the population
According to Sgt. Rasmussen,
rill be under 20 or over 65.
Miss Morris has been assigned
In the last 15 years the per-
to Lackland Air Force Base at
entage of the average consum-
San Antonio where she will at-
r dollar spent on food has
tend the Off icers Training
ropped from 31.4 to 23.7, the
School.
Upon graduation she will be
ercentage spent on clothing
as fallen from 13.7 to 10.1, but
commissioned a second lieuten-
7e're spending more on such
ant in the United States Air
�lings as housing, foreign travel
Force.
ducation and medical care.
Miss Morris is a graduate of
for additional consecutive insertion (2c
Kemp High School and a grad-
IT HAS BEEN found that
uate of Huston-Tillotson College
issing speeds up the ordinary
at Austin, Texas,
ian's pulse only five beats a
iinute.
Joe J. Mirabella, 17, son of
The greeting card industry
Mrs. Josephine Mirabella, 531
eports that more 50-cent "To
Bryant St., Bryan, enlisted in
ly Wife" Christmas cards are
the United States Air Force for
old than 50-cent "To My Hus-
four years Tuesday.
and" cards. Most wives prefer
According to Sgt. Rasmussen,
:) stay in the 35-cent or under
Mirabella has been assigned to
ange.
Lackland Air Force Base at San
Our quotable notables: "Sor-
Antonio where he will take
ow is the mere rust of the soul.
basic training. Upon completion
Lctivity will cleanse and bright-
of his training at Lackland, he
n it."-Samuel Johnson.
will receive technical training in
the mechanical career field.
IN SINGAPORE 29 per cent
* a *
f the dwelling units contain
A. 2C. Donald Garrett, son of
iore than five persons for each
Mrs. Lellian Garrett, 410 East
00m.
7th St., Hearne, reenlisted in
.
One in every five American
the United States Air Force for
.onfarm families has an income
four years Monday.
f $10,000 or more a year.
According to Sgt. Rasmussen,
John F. Kennedy is the second
Garrett has been assigned to the
T.S. president to be survived
462 Strategic Aerospace Wing,
, y his father. The other was
Larson Air Force Base, Wash.
Varren G. Harding. Three p i
resl
His duties will be as an air
ents were outlived by their
policeman.
, - Kennedy, James
Large 2 bedroom house, completely
Cnox Polk and Jameri, A. Gar-
I,-&.&- I I � - .
� James V. Walton. son of 141.
- - - , -----
-&rror--*n-s-.-- 2th-nest --vvzr*"n vi �&
NEW ENGLAND folklore: If
Foster St., College Station, en-
t snows the day you marry,
listed in the United States Air
, ou will wind up rich. If a
Force Nov. 15.
roung girl likes cats better than
According to Sgt. Rasmussen,
logs, she will become an old
Walton will take basic training
naid. The baby who doesn't fall
at Lackland Air Force Base in
lownstairs before he is a year
San Antonio. He has also quali-
ild will turn out a fool.
fied for the Air Force Officers
The longest sermon, delivered
Training program and will at-
ly Clinton Locy of West Rich -
tend the next class in January.
riond, Wash., in 1955, lasted 48
Walton is a 1963 graduate of
iours and 18 minutes. When he
Texas A&M University with a
inished, eight members of the
degree in meteorology.
ongregation still were on hand.
---
If you've lost all your teeth,
30
'ou're suffering from agomphi-
-
Near Austin High School in Bryan!
sis, or toothlessness.
CONTINUES
Turkeys are polygamous.
TA 2,3240 or TA 145,
- - - -
THERE ARE 15,000 different
AIR TRIP
Inds of wine in the world.
I TTIL-ely redecorated 2 bedroom, separ-
'hess is the most ancient game
SAN FRANCISCO IN) -
f pure skill. Portugal has for-
Chan Ten, a 175-pound female
ign possessions 23 times its own
elephant from Bangkok, was
ize. If you can't read 250 words
due to fly on to Amarillo,
. minute, you're slower than
Tex., today.
he average.
A Pan American Airways
It was Benjamin Disraeli who
passenger jet arrived with the
ibserved, "Every man has a
animal Sunday night. It car-
ight to be conceited until he is
ried the elephant in the cargo
uccessful."
compartment.
bedroom apt., $85,00. 3 bedroom,
Children in the Texas Pan-
Biologists from 30 to 60 Tia-
handle donated pennies to a
.
ions are expected to participate
fund for purchasing Chan
n the International Biological
Ten, which is named for Sta-
: for the stud of man's
tion KFDA-TV in Amarillo.
Aace in the world, �nd hope-
ully, to enlarge available re-
FOR LEASE
ources for his future welfare.
Fhe program is to begin in 1965
Ind may last 'live to seven years. I
1QX;Q
NOW SHOWING
.
LEE JAMB
REMICK
-4g
Ial- twLft I
I ( 0 _ I, - .-, 2 -, - - ��.,- - " �-'
DOUBLE FEATURE I
JAMES STEWART
IN
"Strategic
Air Command"
&
GARY COOPER
IN
"Garden
Of Evil" I
is i" �� 1
2 � u _
NOW SHOWING
__ . PWkW""~..% -t-lem - R.* ,�#M, - a
.
�-.., tk
ft..
I I *.
I - &*.. I
.
�'.e I
I 11 I - ,
.0 M.
0
I'll, F .1
, ,
DIR VE-114 *I.
&�
IL L * ,V-�-6-b-ft-e
-
I st Show
TONIGHT6:30 P. M.
DEAN MARTIN
IN
"'Toys In
The Attic"
2ND SHOW 8:30 P. M.
ROBERT WAGNER
IN
"BENEATH THE 12
MILE REEF"
I (in Color)
MISS G A T 0 R - Valerie
Vestal, a Loyola University
sophomore, was named 1963
Gator Bowl Queen in Jack-
sonville, Fla. She will reign
during a week of festivities
that will be climaxed by the
bowl game December 28.
(NEA Telephoto)
6P �
Dusy Bank
0
'Tries Again
In Oklahom-a
TULSA, Okla. (M - The
Southern Hills National Bank of
Tulsa reopens today, but the
name is the only thing similar
to the operation that was shut
down Nov. 8. '
Southern Hills was ordered
closed by Ccqlpfroller of Cur-
rency James� Saxon when a no.
service-charge offer to initial
depositars caused more business
I
tha .")uld be handled.
,
g. 5. It
had 31,000 depositors when It
was closed.
SAXON ORDERED the bank's
assets sold after naming William
H. Greenfield of Dallas conserv-
ator.
The new directors are headed
by Lynn R. Helm, president of
the National Bank of Commerce
in Tulsa.
Saxon also required the new
bank to have a service charge
on checking accounts.
All accounts of the defunct
Southern Hills NatiorTal Bank
will be transferred to the new
model bearing the same iarne
with an "of Tulsa" added.
Many Tulsans who took ad-
vantage of the no-service-
charge offer found themselves
without funds when the bank
closed. Unless they had other
funds, they had to depend on
merchants to hold their checks
UIAI�,%-�.h� rianti ,#PC,_"___J
-
AS THE DAYS stretched into
weeks, many businessmen found
themselves with too much mon-
ey tied up. Signs became com-
mon in Tulsa stores reading,
"Southern Hills Checks not ac.
cepted."
The new directors ran full-
page newspaper advertisements
telling depositors, "You may
start enjoying the normal and
rightful convenience of your ac-
count Monday morning."
Youth Killed
AUSTWELL, Tex. (M - A
sixth grader from Austwell was
fatally shot while hunting geese
with his twin brother Sunday.
He was Severo Camacho, 12,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Tomas Ca-
macho. The death was ruled ac-
cidental by Judge E. B. Craw-
ford Sr. of Rockport.
-
INDI
TONIGHT TUESDAY
FEATURES AT 6:37 - 8:45
GOLDEN BROWN FRIED
I CHICKEN AT OUR SNACK BAR I
Laughs-Laughs-Laughs
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I A ROSS HUNTER-ARWIN Pw,cln
-- __l - ` C01 OR
ARLENE FRANCIS U
I Plus This Great Second I
. , &roism
. knOWS
"I no age.
,
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1, I . g , 1,
h . i V�16!0/''
STA"M AIRW AIVAC LYLES PROD00011
RORY CALHOUN
WILIAM BENDIX
I Starts Wed. "40 Pounds Trouble"
THE BRYAN DAILY EAGLE -DIAL TA 2-3707
19 19
(lassified Advertising
BUY ... SELL ... TRADE ... RENT... HIRE WITH
CLASSIFIED DEADLINE
FOR SALE
MONDAY thru A
0
FRIDAY 9:3 M.
Re rigerator, Excellent condition,
clean. $55. Inquire 2606 Todd before
FOR SUNDAY
5 P.M.
In excellent condition, portable Mo-
torola Stereo phonograph with de-
12 :00 SATURDAY
tachable speakers. Automatic rejec-
DISPLAY CLASSIFIED
tion, plays all records and has 4
speeds. Price $60. Call TA 2-0238.
Weekdays - 5:00 P.M.
Day Before Pubrication
SINGER
Sunday - 12:00 Saturday
Automatic
4c per word for ntst niserflon, 3" Pet
Zig-Zagger, makes button holes, blind
word for second insertion, 21/ pef.word
hem over-ca st. has disc for fancy
for additional consecutive insertion (2c
stitciies. Balance $31.60 or $7 .60 per
w:rd minimum charge): Display classi"
fi d, $1.10 pet column inch fi7st inser-
month. Call TA 2-6421.
tion; $1.00 Pei column inch second in.
sertion; 70c P. column Inch 3rd thru
15th Insertion; 37c per colurmp inch 16th
thru 26th insertion.
Attention Cattlemen
20 Range Cubes, $66 per ton; stock
-
HEARNE
DISTRIBUTOR
feed palates, $57 per ton; 18 dairy
feed, $3.55 per hd.: delivered prices.
Willard Johnson
Gulf Coast Feeds. Calvert, Texas.
507 FULTON ST.
One small horse, well trained but
Phone LI 6-2155, Hearne, Tex.
spirited. Call TA 24461 or V1 6-5368.
Need A Pattern?
Come To Pruitt's
_
_�__��
HOUSES for RENT
Nice clean unfurnished two bedroom
house 2503 Rountree with attached
garage, oak floors, venetian blinds,
floor furnace, ample closets, $55 . 00
We Have It.
month. Apply 119 Lake, Phone TA 2-
1403.
Vogue
Butterick
lJnfurnished house, 5 rooms, located
6 miles west of Bryan, $36. TA 2-3492
McCall
or TA 2-3474.
Simplicity
2 Bedroom unfurnished house, con-
veniently located between Bryan and
Spades
College. Nice and clean, rent reason-
Modes Royal
able. Call VI 6-5866 or TA 3-3416.
Pruitt's Fabric Shop
Lovely 5 bedroom home, call Blair
Perryman, Dishman Real Estate VI
318 Jersey
6-7244 or V1 6-8656.
Southside Shopping Center
College Station
2 bedroom, new paint inside and out.
See at 1909 Echols. TA 3-3563.
Large 2 bedroom house, completely
redecorated. Fenced back yard, $75
a month. Cali TA 2-4955, after 6, TA-
Enjoy Beef Every D"
2-4401.
With Your Food Locker
3 Bedroom, 1 bath, den, double ga-
rage, central heated, one block from
And Home Freezer
Townsbire Shopping Center, $115 per
month. VI 6-5322.
HANSON MEATS
One 2 bedroom bome, located in
Northeast part of Bryan, newly dec-
I
orated interior, $60 per month. Phone
Pugh Realty, VI 6-5711.
Dairy Heifers
APARTMENTS for RENT
Jerseys - Holsteins
�,
Small furnished apartment, two gen-
tlemen or working couple. TA 2-4305.
A-1 sired by Jessup of California stud,
Large, nice, clean, furnished apart_
ment, close-in, reasonable rent and
bred back to Angus or Hereford bulls
bills paid. TA 2-2854. Apply at 506 E.
and due to start calving in October.
30
Phone Ott Reeves at
-
Near Austin High School in Bryan!
furnished 2 bedroom duplex apart-
ment at $55, plus uWities. No Pet&
1 41 15-
TA 2,3240 or TA 145,
- - - -
- - �
__ _1 - __
at 1011-A East 2b, . 0 . r.AWi49&
.
__ . _
BUY, SELL, or TRADE
TA 2-6019.
I TTIL-ely redecorated 2 bedroom, separ-
ate dtning, duplex, ideal for single
Guns. cameras, tools. musical histru-
person or couple. Call Blair Perry-
ments, furniture. bicycles, or any odds
man at Dishman Real Estate. VI 6-
and ends-from airplanes to zithers.
7244 or V1 6-8656.
ODDS & ENDS OUTLET CENTER
800 N. Bryan-TA 2-0736
.
We are now taking applications fo
the first 20 units of Fairview apart-
After 6 to 9--TA 2-4595
ments which will be available Jan. 1.
Call VI "713 or VI 6-8713.
TOPSOIL - GRAVEL
Two nice unfurnished brick duplex
apartments. Near Crockett School. 2
FILLSAND
bedroom apt., $85,00. 3 bedroom,
$125.00. Call rA 2-3525.
Barnyard Fertilizer
Call P. L. Scarmado
-
New one bedroom carpeted apart-
ment . Furnished, central air and
TA 2-1837 weekdays after 3:30 p.m.
heat, Varsity Apartments. V1 11-8295
or V1 6-571 1.
Anytime Saturday or Sunday
A deer hunters special. A good Jeep
just repainted. Make me an offer.
FOR LEASE
Call TA 3-5215.
Warehouse on Fountain Ave. with 1 !�
Office spa ce on ground floor, Astin
Bldg, and Varisco Bldg for lease.
Reasonable rent. TA 2-3456 8 a.m.
DAYS OF YORE
to 5 P.M.
ANTIQUE STORE
Modern office accommodation with
parking lot, air conditioned, janitorial
service furnished, up to 4000 square
feet. Kraft Office Building, TA 2-5019.
3203 N. Hwy. 6
New Shipment
- -
1955 four wheel drive Dodge Power
Wagon with front end wench and new
Air conditioner, Frigidaire, 110 volts
factory rebuilt motor. $695. Whitley
Auto Part, Hwy 21 West. TA 2-6840.
3 ,� ton, 2 compressors, excellent con-
dition, winter priced at $65. 4405
I
Aspen.
WANTED IrO BUY
HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN-used-
will sell for less than 3,' original list
��
Wanted to buy pecans. Food Town.
-
price. See it at MOONEY PIANO
AND ORGAN CO. il, block west of
-
PETS
Texas Ave. on Coulter, 1208 South
Coulter, Bryan.
,
One male pedigreed silver min-toy
GARAGE CHRISTMAS SALE-Can-
Poodle, 10 weeks old, has had per-
manent shots, $75. Call TA 24839.
dies, arrangements, decorations, gift
wrappings, children's chest of draw-
ers, maple chairs, clothing, dishes
Pointer puppies for sale. Subject to
registration. Will hold until Christ-
Dec. 2, 9 a.m. 509 Ridgewood, behind
mas. TA 3-3454 after 5.
I Winns.
-
T'
TRADE YOUR OLD
FURNITURE
FOR NEW FURNITURE
CIMM
AN% Mr W 9
at
A
0 0 . AffAr-MA iAL" TOWNSHIRE
%# 4 - '�� '"��
Be I WINSLOW
CONTRACT01R
BU I LDI NG �� TA 3-3501 * REMODELI NG
New Additions Concrete work
Roof ing Driveways
Car Ports Slabs
Garaces Curbs
Dens Gutters
Sheet Rock Steps
Painting Walks
Cabinets Patios
House Leveling Storm Shelters
NO JOB TO SMALL
FOR SALE
Couch, $15; Table, $5; Chairs, $5 an
$10* Dinette with 6 hairs $50;
Che�sts, $10 each. 2401 Wayside
_' --
A new roof for your home with top
grade materials and workmanship
for as little as $9.59 per month with
A. title 1 insured
loan. Call DOCTOR FIXIT at the
MARION PUGH LUMBER CO. VI 6-
5711 and ask for a free estimate.
__
-_
For Sale by Primary Department of
Saint Paul's Methodist Church Sun-
day School painted pine cones, also
door swags. Give us your orders.
Phone VI 6-7444 or TA 2-1403.
Camper for pick-up-4 months old.
$100. See after 6 p.m. at 1003 Welch,
College Station.
-
Lady's white ball gown, size T4, with
hoop skirt, excellent condition, $40.
VI 6-7575.
Albino snow white saddle mule. One �
3 year old paint filly. One mare and
colt, kid gentle. 3115 Texas.
-
1963 Model
Twin Needle Automatic
Zig-Zag-Sews on buttons - Makes
Button Holes-Overcast blind hem-
Twin Needle fancy work without at-
tachment-Balance $34.60 or $5.80 per
month. Call TA 2-6421.
Wanted to buy pecans. Food Town.
Cruisaire motor scooter-windshield,
crash helmet, and buddy seat; A-1
condition $100. 1953 hardtop Stude-
baker, good running condition, $75.
See at 402 Mitchell St. TA 3-6421.
WANT TO BUY A 1000
Junk Cars and Trucks
WHITLEY AUTO PARTS
Hwy 21 West
TA 3-5054 TA 2-6840
12 acres of land on Hwy 60, 3 miles
west of College. $500.00 down, $50 : go
per month. Phone V1 6-5395 or inquire
310 Day Street.
__ -
- DEER HUNTERS"
We can bring your trophy bucks, back
as near to life, as possible. We don't
do rush work. Our motto, Quality
first . Don , t cut animal on throat. For
t skin behind front
shoulders. Salt skins good.
J. S. Palermo. Sculptor-Taxidermist-
Tanner, 20 yrs. experience. Shop Ph.
TA 3-1784. Shop 801 W. 25th. Home
Phone TA 3-1205.
OLD REED ORGAN-Chapel style
cabinet. This old organ is in excellent
playing condition. Mooney Piano and
Organ Co., 1 ,'� block west of Texas
Ave. on Coulter, 1208 South Coulter,
Bryan, Texas.
Year old Pianorgan, 5 rolls of cords
and 20 keys. Key are numbered as
well as music. $80. TA 2-1882.
House full of furniture, 6 months old.
Sale, all or part. Come by 2410 South-
side Drive, Bryan (anytime),
GARAGE SALE: Mohair sofa and
chair, blue $35; chair. overstuffed,
gold $5; dressing table with 3-way
mirror $15 maple 5 drawer chest $15;
'buffet, maiiogany $15; dormitory type
steel bed and two mattresses $25;
� electric stove, Hotpoint, double oven
$75. 700 Pershing St. College Station.
REPOSSESSED SPINET PIANO-will
sell to person with good credit for
less Ynan'balance due. 'Pay only State
Sales Tax and take up small monthly
&X5rZM., i A�ve.
Coulter, 1208 South Coulter, Bryan,
Texas.
_____
FEMALE HELP WANTED
Waitress wanted,
neat in appearance.
Apply at
Triangle Restuarant,
3606 S. College,
TA 2
Wanted waitress. Apply in person at
Norton Pancake House, College Sta-
tion.
__
MALE HELP WANTED -
EXPERIENCED TRUCK
MECHANIC
Start at Top Wages if
You Qualify
Free hospitalization insurance and
retirement. Opportunity for advance-
ment for the right man. Contact Mr'
Caldwell or Mr. Mask. International
Harvester Sales and Service.
401 S. Main, TA 2-0158
Equal Opportunity Employer
Electrolux franchise available in the
Bryan area if you qualify. Call or
write Electrolux Corp., 1817 Franklin,
Waco, Texas. Ph. PL 2-8359.
_
I Phone TA 2-3707 for Classified
TRAINING SCHOOLS
� � �
=1411YA
� 7-becal."Se V0. talk a
"
7�14 schZ01 omio�
Study with 65-yr.-old School
Take approved subjects for
DIPLOMA by HOME STUDY
$7 monthiv includes all books.
For 56 - page FREE BULLETIN
PHONE Houstcri UN 9-4434 or
Write AN�ERICAN SCHOOL
511 Pecare, Houston Texas � I
AK WASH'
Lu
MV OPEN SOON
WATCH FOR
4 * DATE & PLACE
FRANCHISE & SALkS
REPRESENTATIVE
MARVIN W. DUPRANT
3921 Hilltop Dr. Bryan V1 6-5638
#
,
NOTICE
See
Mother Pocohontas
Palm Reader and Advisor
All are welcome-White and Colored
Located in Caldwell, Texas
I block west of Junction 21 and 36
on Hwy 21 West. Watch for the Indian
Head on the sign.
-
a cordance with the will of the
late Ed Hollyfield of EI Dorado, Ark-
ansas, notice is hereby given of the
establishment of THE ED HOLLY-
FIELD SCHOLARSHIP FUND as a
loan fund to aid needy, deserving,
ministerial students enrolled in Aus
tin Presbyterian Theological Senii-
nary. For further information, write
Director of Admissions, 100 East 27th
Street, Austin, Texas 78705.
PIANO TUNING
& REPAIRS
For the Best in Piano Tuning.
Repairs & Rebuilding
call
Jack Stout
% Mooney's -
TA 3-5045 or TA 2-4875
WE BUTCHER AND
PROCESS LIVESTOCK
For Your Food Lockers Anti
Home Freezers
We Freeze to Please
HANSONS MEATS
Weekly Tire Special
7.50xI4
4 Ply
$10.90
plus tax
Quality Tires for Less
BRYAN TIRE MART
1619 N. Hwy. 6-TA 2-5686
SEIBERLING
'"THE WORLM'S FINEST TIRE"
INTERNATIONAL
EXTERMINATOR CORP.
Since 1900
Killers of Rats, Mice, Roaches
Ant- and etc.
termite Motbproofing and Fumigation
300 S. College TA 3-1937
-
For
CENTRAL HEATING
� 1 A1tA7r- , .%- , v&AL- ,, zmd Nrr V-ValaitiuMn?
I
Service & Repair
.- 1. - -'ALL .
G. H. (Moe) Hair
2920 Ok'.;.� Phone TA 2-17IR
Bryan, Texas Phone TA 2-63ii
THE FACTS ABOUT
ALCOHOLISM
1 out of every 14 drinkers could be-
come an alcoholic! Not a very pretty
statistic . . . is it? For some, It's a
heartbreaking, home-breaking, life-
wrecking statistic. The alcoholic may
even be a member of YOUR own fam-
ily. Don't despair. You can help
him recover! HOW?
By understanding that alcoholism
is a disease, Like any disease, it
must be treated. The alcoholic can
recover with proper treatment.
As a rule, he or she can't do it
alone. He WANTS to, but CAN'T.
You can help. For information call or
write your local Alcoholism Informa-
tion Committee TODAY.
-
ALCOHOLISM
THE BRAZOS COMMITTEE
ON ALCOHOLISM
VI 6-6300 - VI 6-7532 - VI 6-5060
Box 97, Bryan
NATIONAL ALCOHOLISM
INFORMATION
Week, December 1-7.
If you want to drink, that's your
business. If you want to stop.
that's our business.
Alcoholics Anonymous
CALL TA 2-4959 or TA 2-2185
Separate closed meeting for A. A.
-Alanon-Alateen, Friday. Open meet-
ing. Tuesday. Public information
meeting last Tuesday each month.
All meetings 8 p.m. Old K.C. Hall,
216 W. 26th, upstairs.
- - ... -
WORK WANTED -
Will do ironing, sewing, mending, and
alterations in my home. 1015 E. Dans-
by St. Phone TA 2-4650.
�
House Trailers for Sale
Used house trailer, 36 ft. long,
heavy duty aluminum Spa=
$1750. Excellent condition inside and
out. Call TA 2-6182 after 5 p.m.
- -
8x36 ft. Supreme Victor Mobile Home.
air conditioned, very clean, $1500. TA
3_38,1
, 4.
-
�_ USED CARS
1960 Corvair 4 door, standard shift,
$695. 600 N. Bryan.
-
1960 White Thunderbird, very clean.
all equipment including air-condition-
ing. TA 3-3951.
-
1962 MG Midget, gray, Roadster, heat-
er, $1500. V1 6-7223 after 5 and any-
time on weekend.
1957 Ford Fairlane 500, for sale or
trade, 706 Garden Acres. VI 6-4107.
1957 Pontiac 4 door sedan. Factory
air conditioner, automatic transmis-
sion, radio and heater. Good tires and
battery. Good condition. One owner.
Call 0. D. Dabbs, TA 3-6254 or TA
3-3155.
1963 F.C.-170 Cab Frontward Willis
Jeep, 4 wheel drive, like new condi-
tion, only has 4871 actual miles. Fully
equipped. Price to sell. Call after
7 p.m. TA 3-5004.
1962 Mercury Comet-S-22-Automatic,
five new tires, 20,000 miles, perfect
condition. Price $1450. Call V1 6-8951
( after & p.m.) 210 Montclair.
MON
,
USED CARS
1960 Rambler
Station Wagon
Automatic Transmission
One Owner
Excellent Condition
$950
V1 6-8564
-
THE CLEANEST '56 IN TOWN Lin-
coln Premier, all Possible accessories
including air conditioning. Phone Vl
133-8540.
1959 Anglia English Ford, mechanical-
ly perfect-need small amount body
work-priced for quick sale, 1309
Skrivanek Dr. TA 3-3434.
Must sell either 1955 Cadillac or 1962
Falcon Custom Club Wagon (bus).
Both in excellent condition. VI 6-7690.
1962 Mercedez Bena 220-S, 4 door,
full leather interior, Becker AM-FM
radio mint condition, Temple, Texas,
PR 8-8374. Bargain at $2995.
1956 Buick, in good shape, 2205
Cavitt. Phone TA 3-2679.
1956 Oldsmobile, 4 door, power, hy-
dromatic, radio, heater. $350. Call
TA 2-6126.
1959 Thunderbird-Jet Black, two
owners, 34,000 actual miles, A-1 con-
dition. Loaded $1495. Call Bill Var-
ner. VI 6-7686.
- ____
REAL ESTATE
PUGH REALTY CO.
V r a very small do%&m payment you
can own this lovely 3 bedroom 2 bath,
family room, brick, with all built-ins,
central air and hest with carpeting.
This is a real bargain at $16,900.
Located near A&M College and Con-
solidated Schools.
" your family growing? See this
lovely 4 bed two bath brick with
all built-ins only 10 blocks from the
campus. F.H.A. financed.
We also hav, beautiful large building
sites, curbed, guttered, streets lights
in highly restricted area of College
Station. Buy today and build later.
$10 down and $10 dollars a month.
46 acres, Navasota Bottom, approxi-
mately 1 ,� mile river frontage. In the
heart of the hunting country.
PHONE
MARION PUGH LUMBER CO.
VI "711
After 5. VI 6-5668
REDMOND
REALESTATE
NEAR CONSOLIDATED SCHOOL
W are showing by appointment a
four bedroom two bath home in
Redmond Terrace. This home is
priced at $18,700-has an approxi-
mately $16,200 loan with Prudential
and the monthly payments are
$115.92 including taxes, insurance,
principal and interest. This home
is less than two years old, air con-
ditioned and centrally heated.
STANFIELD CIRCLE-BRYAN
Let us show you a nice three bed-
room home in Bryan, Centrally
heated and air conditioned. The
sales price is $13,750 and now has a
$12,000 existing loan. This is a
good buy. Call for appointment.
Monthly payments are $98.00 includ-
bir taxes, insurance, principal and
interest.
_LA
, &Y L ' - --.'--
t,�Ij7rj JA;wmg by appointment
a lovely Austin Stone home on Lazy
.
Lane In Bryan. This home is a
two bedroom home with a large
Den with large closet. Has central
heat and air conditioned. This home
is selling for $14,700 and can be
easily financed.
REDMOND
V1 6-5116 - VI 64934 - VI 64009
3 bedroom house, 213 Pershing, (South
Oakwood) College Station. Call VI 6-
6049 for appointment to see house.
Brand new brick home; 3 carpet-
ed bedrooms and living room.
2 tile baths, 1750 square ft. heat-
ed and cooled. Double garage,
oven range, hood disposal, dish-
washer, desk, central air and
heat by Friedrich. $18,500. 6
Loan of $17,300. 1409 Skrivanek
Drive.
R . E. Frieda, Builder
TA 3-3813
3 Bedroom, 1 bath, den, double ga-
rage, central heat, I block from
Townshire Shopping Center, $2500
equity and take up payments of $107
a month. VI 6-5322.
By Owner - Unusual Country Home-
stone. Approximately 8 acres over-
looking lake. Good fishing, pleasant
surroundings. Hwy 21 East of Bryan.
TA 2-1773.
Choice large lots, some with trees.
east Garden Acres and Tanglewood.
After 5:30 p.m. Call VI 6-5696.
For Sale by Owner
3 bedroom, 1". bath brick home
4 mortgage. Redmond Terrace
I block from Consolidated Schools.
College Station
VI 6-5604
2 bedroom home, Garden Acres, large
yard. No down payment. $85 monthly
including taxes and insurance. Call
V1 6-5694 after 9 a.m.
3410 Carter Creek Parkway-3 bed-
rooms, family room, 2 baths, double
garage, built-in kitchen, air condition-
ing, fireplace. carpeting, and many
extras. This home has been decorated
with many beautiful building mater-
ials.
"F`E�rsonality Homes"
In Parkway Terrace
Phone VI 6-4717
Lakeshore cabin, distinct A frame
design, unique and impressive, on
large wooded lot. $7,250. Loan $6,000.
VI 6-8545.
28 acres of land, 6 miles on Leonard
Road and 1 mile off Silver Hill Road.
Reasonable. Rt. 4, Box 254, Bryan.
MOVING
LOCAL AND LONG
DISTANCE
WHITENER
Transfer and Storage
3000 TABOR RD.
Acient Fat
NORTH AMERICAN
VAN LINES
PHONE TA 2-1616
MINN
FAMILY TOGETHER
President Lyndon Johnson and members of his family pose together at the Capitol in
Washington. From left: Daughter Lynda Bird, 19; * daughter Lucy Baines, 16; John-
1�1
son, and Mrs. Johnson. (AP Wirephoto).
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE OR LEASE!
Convenient to the University and near
schools, churches and shopping! lm-
maculate rambler with the "space"
you are seeking! One of our very
nicest properties! Available NOW!
For complete details, phone Mrs. M.
D. Darrow at V1 6-5936. ANOTHER
Berger and Associates Realtors ex-
clusive property!
2 bedroom home, central heat, air
conditioned, plenty of closets and stor-
age, price below appraisel. Between
Bryan and College Station. 729 Lazy
Lane. VI 6-7363.
Completely remodeled, 3 bedroom
and den home, at 805 Enfield, $350
down and $62 per mo. plus taxes and
insurance. Frank Thurman, VI 6-4717
or VI 6-8427.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE
THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC
COMPANY hereby gives notice
that on the 12th day of Nov-
ember 1963, it filed with the
Interstate' Commerce Commis-
sion, at Washington, D. C an
application for a certificai� of
public convenience and neces-
sity authorizing acquisition of
a portion of the line to be aban-
doned by Missouri Pacific Rail-
road Company extending from
College Station opposite appli-
cant's Engineer Station 5031/68
--- �i W ___
En neer 10 5 12/62 ap-
proximately 8,094 feet in �razos
C� Texas, Finance Docket
No. 22847.
SOUTHERN PACIFIC
(Dec. 2-9-16)
EIGHTY-NINTH - Sir Win-
ston Churchill gazes out of a
window of his London home
on his 89th birthday. He
spent the day at home with
his wife, surrounded by pre-
sents from the world over.
(NEA Radio-Telephoto)
Ph TX 2-=7 fv: Classilled
_____WfflWM
SPORTS CAR CENTER
Renault 0 Peugeot & BMC
Sales! Parts! Servicel
"%V* service All Foreign C*rs"
1422 Taxes Ave. Ph. TA 24S 1 7
U-2 Pilot Dies
In Gulf Crash
LAGRANGE, Ga. (M - A U-2
plane which crashed in the Gulf
of Mexico Nov. 20 carried the
pilot to his death, the Air Force
says.
Members of the family of
Capt. Joe G. Hyde Jr., said Sun-
day the Air Force had notified
them Saturday that Hyde went
down with the plane after a
mission over Cuba.
A Coast Guard cutter found
the wreckage of the high level
'
reconnaissance plane about 40
miles northwest of Key West,
Fla., the day after the crash.
Mario Pei, the noted linguist,
calls Swahili "the worthiest and
most dignified of all African
Negro tongues." He recommends
it as a national language for
African nations south of the
Sahara.
Expert Body
and
Fender Work I
Painting
FREE ESTIMATE
HALSELL MOTOR
COMPANY INC.
1411 Texas Ave. TA 2-3784 1
1, I
THREE TROUBLES WITH A FRAME HOUSE -
WFIICH DO YOU WANT TO OVERCOME?
V - _,_ __�:�:::x:�i:�:; .... ,'. I-,
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,
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:._� _.�. - ", P
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.. ....� -STONE
. � E I K' M 'A "
being put on right now !
1. ALWAYS NEEDS PAINTING 2. DRAFTY AND
COLD IN THE WINTER 3. LOOKS TOO PLAIN
PERMA-STONE eliminates the need of paiwing, repairs and upkeep expense of every
kind. It never needs painting, because the colors cie a permanent part of the stone
itself. There is no upkeep with it because it is mode out of steel, rein' forced concrete
that is guaranteed in writing to stay on your wa:ls for a very minimum of 20 years, or
it will be replaced free.
PERMA-STONE insulates as well as beautifies. If your home is cold and drafty, it
completely seals in your walls from the ground up, so that the on*y way anything can
got into your home is through the doors and windows.
PERMA-STONE GIVES YOUR HOME A SOLID, SUBSTANTIAL appearance and makes it
look far more expensive than the moderate cost of the job.
PERMA-STONE is now introducing it's new, extended ledge stone design where occa-
sionally a stone sticks out farther from tbe wall than the others giving it that tough
natural look.
CLIP this coupon now and send in to the �orne office in Waco for their free booklet
of "MODERNIZING MAGIC" showing actual photos of this striking effect.
TAKE advantage of our special 30-day discount prices, estimates given free within 125
miles of Bryan.
I
-------- BRYAIN AGENT
: PERMA-STONE :
: 1 .
: BOX 1551 1
ffm A�
I MEW �
i : NL�=
I :
: Natne ' VARN '0 5C' 0"'1h '
: WACO, TEXAS :
'
---------------.-- . 111 1111F
: : . .
: !
v Address -------
: -------:' LUMBER COAMPANY
: city----------------------,-
, ------ - -------- - _q HIGHWAY 6 SOUTH - VI 6-4787
11 I
V
1.
I
STEERS' 2 D SCORING BID FOILED
Texas' second quarter, fifth possession attempt to trim the Texas Aggies' 7 -3 lead
went awry from the AMU 12. End Ronnie Carpenter (83) Partially blocked Tony
Crosby's (91) 22 -yard attempt. The ball is just off Carpenter's out - stretched arms.
Texas came back in the fourth quarter for two touchdowns and a 15 -13 victory.
(Eagle Photo by Gene Dennis)
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Texas is the undefeated, un-
tied champion, B a y l o r has
Chiefs Sinking,
No Changes
Says Owner
NEW YORK (1111 —There won't
be any changes in the coaching
staff of the Kansas City Chiefs,
the owner of the American Foot-
ball League club said Sunday.
"I haven't considered a coach-
ing change and there won't be
any," said Lamar Hunt, after
watching his team lose tO NL.w
York, 17 -0. Kansas City has lost
six games and tied one in its
last seven games. The Chiefs'
record is 2 -7 -2.
"We don't have weak person-
nel, either,' Hunt said. "In fact,
I think we are stronger talent -
wise than we were last year
when we won the championship.
We were just knocked out of
the race early and it has had
an effect on the players."
1 L ast
'ants in
clinched second place and only
the jockeying for third place re-
mains in a Southwest Confer-
ence football race that has a de-
layed windup this week.
The conference will have two
bowl teams — Texas in the Cot-
ton Bowl and Baylor in the
Bluebonnet. The latter will be
made official today since the
conference has to give its ap-
proval, e v e n its conservative
secretary, Howard Grubbs, says
is certain.
TEXAS ENDED the s e a s o n
last week when it beat Texas
A &M, 15 -13, to finish undefeat-
ed and untied and Lank toward
a national championship.
Only four teams still have
games, those made possible be-
cause of postponements. Baylor
plays Southern Methodist at
Waco Saturday while Rice and
Texas Christian close out at
Fort Worth.
Baylor hopes to wind up with
a 7 -3 record so it will look as
good as Louisiana State, its op-
ponent in the Bluebonnet Bowl.
Lante ns Fit in Fishing
Equipment Category, Too 1::
Among experienced anglers,
flight fishing has long been
recognized as an effective
means of hooking big trout,
walleye, bass, and several oth-
er species of fish which be-
come quite active in their
feeding activities after sunset.
Recently, Y anglers lers have
g
been literally "shedding new
light" on the traditional ap-
proach to nocturnal fishing.
Although not popular in all
parts of the country as yet,
fishing with lightF has scored
some impressive results in
widely scattered areas.
Equipment for this type of
fishing includes a boat, motor,
standard fishing gear, a pair
of gasoline lanterns, reflectors
and some sort of device for
holding the lanterns out over
the water. Live minnows are
the recommended type of bait,
but artificials in the form of
jigs, flasher spoons, and plas-
tic worms can also be effec-
tive.
When the boat is anchored,
the lanterns are lit and hung
over the gunwales of the boat,
several inches from the water.
Reflectors, which can be made
from heavy foil or tin, are
placed so that most of the
light directed downward
gtls e d
The light attracts insects
and other aquatic life, which
in turn attract shad and other
small bait fish. This concen-
tration of food is irrestible to
larger game fish. Soon, they'll
appear and commence snatch-
ing your offerings with the
same abandon that they do
other available food.
Once the action starts, it's
usually fast and furious.
School fish, such as crappie
and white bass, are particular-
ly susceptible to this sype of
fishing. Even walleyes and big
trout have been taken by
fishermen using this lantern
technique.
Three Tilt Lead
A rea
Cage 'la
The Bryan Broncos present night games. The Hornets in-
their basketball case in Mad- vade Brenham for the Cubs in
isonville t o n i g h t as SFA, a 6 p.m. brace of games. The
A &M Consolidated and Snook Bluejays and Tigers hook up
open a slate of seven games in 6:30 and 8 p.m. games at
and three tournaments for College Station. Allen travels
area teams this week. to Navasota for a pair of
Bryan seeks its first win games, at 6:30 and 8 p.m.
from the Mustangs at 7:30 The mad whirl of opening
p.m. Consolidated goes for tourney play follows for each
number three at Crockett at team, the five local quintets
8 p.m. and Snook takes on set for play in three meets.
Brenham at Snook at 7 p.m. Bryan and Consolidated are
Caldwell joins Snook, Con- seated in the 15th a n n u a 1
solidated and the Allen Acad- Bryan Chamber of Commerce
emy Ramblers in Tuesday tourney. It begins at 11 a.m.
Friday at SFA Gym. Bryan
SWC CAGE MARKS 1 -1 takes on Conroe at 2:30 p.m.
in the Broncos' meet opener
and the Tigers are bracketed
® 11 � Ag ® Slate Thursda , Y
Steers Favored to Repeat
B
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS day night against Houston at
Defending champion T e x a s College Station.
makes its s t a r t in another There are 13 intersectional
Southwest Conference basket- games on the schedule for the
ball campaign tonight. week.
The Longhorns, expected to
lead the field a g a i n, will be
hosts to H o w a r d Payne of Midw es t ern,
Brownwood while most other
conference members are meet- McMurry At
ing intersectional foes.
Arkansas and Texas Tech got Top of TAC
the drive under way Saturday.
Arkansas b e a t Southwestern
Louisiana, 71 -65, while Texas ABILENE UPl — Midwestern
Tech was nosed out, 76 -75, by and McMurry were the only
New Mexico. winners among Texas Athletic
BOTH PLAY again Monday Conference teams in opening
night with Texas Te ch facing a basketball play last week.
tough one in Kentucky at Lex-
ingt m and Arkansas host to Midwestern beat Tarleton
Missouri. State, 85 -55, for a conference
Rice, another 'top -rated team, victory then toppled Oklahoma
opens its season against Vander" 86 -70, in' a noncon-
bilt at Houston ile Texas ference go.
n
Christian will n at Oklahoma McMurry beat Texas Luther -
City University. an, 98-81, in another nonconfer-
Vanderbilt goes to Dallas enr•e test.
Tuesday night to help Southern Tarleton State, with its loss
Methodist start the campaign. to Midwestern, became the nce
Baylor opens against Arlington lar dweller of the conference
State at Waco the same evening. and the conference and the Tex -
Texas A &M gets going Thurs- ans also took an 84 -73 beating
from Howard Payne of the Lone
Star Conference.
Arka nsas Aide The other member of the Tex-
as Conference, Hardin - Simmons,
Reported Ch
O1Ce opened its schedule by bowing
to Bradley University, 83 -63.
Two league games are sched-
At Tennessee
tiled this week and both of them
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (MI —Doug involve McMurry and Tarleton
Dickey, young assistant coach State. The Indians meet the
at the University of Arkansas, Texans at Stephenville Monday
was reported today to be Ten- night and they face each other
nessee's choice as head football in Abilene Saturday night.
coach to succeed ousted Jim
McDonald.
McDonald, fired Sunday after
compiling a 5 -5 record this fall,
was named assistant athletic di-
rector to Bob Woodruff. �A
McDonald had been appointed r
head coach last
t June 0, follow-
ing the dismissal of Bowden
Wyatt.
The university's athletics ? r
board meets today at which for- ' ti
mal announcement of the hir- '
ing of Dickey is expected.
0 11 J
Dr. Earl Ramer, board chair- ! • r
man, declined comment on pub-
lished reports that Dickey would
get the job. However, he said
the new coach might be named
at the meeting.
Dickey is 31 and has been on t s
Coach Frank Broyles' staff at Q
Arkansas since 1959. He is the Q t T
-Xk I
Razorbacks' offensive backfield
coach.
e
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NEWS SUPPLY
123 EAST 25TH STREET
LSU has a 7 -3 record.
Baylor clinched the Bluebon-
net invitation by beating Rice,
21 -12, on the heroics of Don
Trull, who set passing records
and scored all of the Bear
touchdowns.
TCU GOT IN position for a
possible third place finish in the
conference race by b e a t i n g
SMU, 22 -15, with a last quarter
rally.
The conference race certainly
didn't end up like it was pre-
dicted. Arkansas was picked to
win the title but wound up with
a 3 -4 record. Baylor was ranked
fifth and not only finished sec-
ond but came very close to win-
ning the title.
TCU, picked in some quarters
to fight for the championship,
can't do better than break even
in conference warfare.
And Trull is likely to win the
conference scoring champion -
shp. He has 54 points the same
as Tommy Ford of Texas, who
has finished the season.
Who Texas will play in the
Cotton Bowl won't be known
until next Saturday when Navy
plays Army and Pitt meets Penn
State. Navy generally is expect-
ed to accept the bowl bid should
it beat Army.
Alston Si gns
Ilth Contract
With Dodgers
SAN DIEGO, Calif. 0B —Wal-
ter Alston, dean of active major
league managers in point of
continuous service with one
club, signed for his 11th season
with the world champion Los
Angeles Dodgers g g
e s toda .
Y
Alston immediately ann
y ounc -
ed he wants to retain all his
coaches, including Leo Duroch-
er.
No salary figure was released
but a reliable source said Alston
will make $50,000, about $7,000
more than he received this year.
Like all his previous Dodger
contracts, this one runs one year.
Since Alston became manager
in 1954, the Dodgers have won
four National League pennants
and three world championships.
They have finished second three
times, third once, fourth once
and seventh once. They never
won a World Series before he
became manager.
NFL Picture Clear As Mud
By JIM BECKER
Associated Press Sports Writer
Things were considerably
clearer in the National Football
League title picture today —with
two weeks to go, there are only
six teams left with a chance to
win.
And just five with a chance
to tie.
The Pittsburgh Steelers can
only win or lose — they have
too many ties to tie.
ACTION OVER the long
weekend produced three ties in
seven games, believed to be a
record dating way back beyond
the days when such as Kenosha,
Hammond and Stepleton, for ex-
ample, were in the league.
Sunday, the Chicago Bears
played their second 17 -17 tie in
a row, this time with Minneso-
ta. That left the Bears one -half
game in front in the West over
the Green Bay Packers, who
tied Detroit, 13 -13, on Thanks-
giving. The Bears are 9 -1 -2, the
Packers 9 -2 -1.
In the East, the Cleveland
Browns broke up the three -way
deadlock at the top by trimming
the St. Louis Cardinals, 24 -10.
The New York Giants kept pace
with the Browns by scratching
past Dallas, 34 -27, as old Y. A.
Tittle set an NFL career record
of 197 touchdown passes.
THE BROWNS and Giants
are 9 -3 each.
The Steelers played their
third tie of the season and sec-
and of the year with Philadel- 21 -17, over San Francisco, and
phia, this time 20 -20. Baltimore whipped the Wash -
That left St. Louis and Pitts- ington Redskins, 36 -20.
burgh tied for second, the Cards In the American Football
at 8 -4 and the Steelers at 6 -3 -3. League, San D i e g o defeated
In other Sunday games, Los Houston, 27 -0; New York beat
Angeles won its third straight, Kansas City, 174, and Boston
BRYAN EAGLE
SPO R T S
SIX MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963
Bryan To Bost TaylormLiberty
As Schoolboys Hit Quarterfinals
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Texas schoolboy football
race rumbles into its quarter-
finals this week with clear -cut
favorites for the four champion-
ships as scarce as more than
the usual quota of upsets can
make them.
Only three undefeated teams
remain in Class AAAA and two
of them meet in the headline
game. And they'll be playing off
a tie when Spring Branch and
Pasadena, two of the unbeaten,
get together at Spring Branch
Friday night.
During the regular season
these two teams wound up in a
14 -14 deadlock.
SAN ANTONIO Lee is the
only unbeaten and untied team,
but it won't be favored to win
its quarterfinal game. The op-
ponent will be Corpus Christi
Miller, which appears to be the
championship favorite if any-
body is. Lee and Miller play at
San Antonio Friday night.
San Antonio and Amarillo
Tascosa tilt at San Angelo Sat-
urday while Fort Worth Pas-
chal and Garland tangle at Dal-
las Friday night in the other
Class AAAA quarterfinals.
Dumas, Class AAA defending
champion and one of four un-
defeated, untied teams left in
the division, tackles Graham at
Borger Saturday. While Grah-
am has been defeated and tied
in its drive to the playoffs, the
Steers still appear to be the
strongest challenge for Dumas
to date.
McKINNEY AND Corsicana
play at Dallas Saturday night,
Conroe and LaMarque get to-
gether at Houston Friday night
and Gonzales and Pharr -San
Juan -Alamo tangle at McAllen
Saturday night.
Corsicana, LaMarque and
Gonzales are the other three
undefeated, untied teams. Cor-
sicana and LaMarque will be
favored to win, but Gonzales
appears to have its hands full
with Pharr -San Juan - Alamo.
Dalhart, the only team with a
perfect record left in Class AA,
takes on Crane, while Rockwall
plays Paul Pewitt, Taylor meets
Liberty and Missouri City Dul-
les plays Sinton in the quarter-
finals.
Dalhart and Crane clash at
Lubbock Saturday, Rockwall
and Pewitt at Commerce Satur-
day night, Taylor and Liberty
at Bryan and Dulles and Sinton
at Victoria Friday night.
DALHART, Rockwall, Liber-
ty and Sinton will be mild fav-
orites to come through.
Albany leads the way into the
Class A quarter - finals and. the
Lions will be favored to take
out Van Alstyne in a battle at
Weatherford Friday night.
Other quarter -final games in
Class A match Petersburg with
Merkel at Snyder Friday, Halls -
ville with Bastrop at Longview
and George West with Woods -
boro at Refugio, all Friday
night.
Petersburg, Hallsville and
George West will be favored.
against Laredo at 4 p.m.
Snook, Allen and Caldwell
have assignments in the Madi-
sonville tournament, to run
from Thursday through Sat-
urday night.
The Snook girls will play in
the North Zulch Tournament,
Thursday through Saturday.
whipped Buffalo, 17 -7, Sunday.
UNDERDOG Minnesota Sunday
d
everything to the Bears except
beat them. The Vikings held'
Chicago to 22 yards rushing in!
the first half and led 17 -3 at in-
termission, as Ron VanderKel-
en guided the team in place of
injured Fran Tarkenton, and
completed his first NFL touch-
down pass.
The Bears battled back in the
t h i r d quarter on a 49 -yard
march to close the gap and then
got the break of the game. Tom-
my Mason fumbled on the Vik-
ing 11, and two plays later Bill
Wade hit Joe Marconi on a
touchdown pass for the tie.
Frank Ryan returned to form
for the Browns and J i m m y
Brown blasted his own season
rushing record. Ryan, benched
two weeks ago when the Cardi-
nals trimmed the Browns, rid-
dled the St. Louis defense for
210 yards, and Brown gained 179
yards on 29 carries. Jimmy also
took the league scoring lead
with 90 points, as he scored two
touchdowns from close in.
THE BROWNS wrapped up
the game in the first half with a
21 -3 lead.
Brown broke his own record
of 1,527 yards set in 1958 as he
ran his total to 1,677 yards with
two games to go.
Tittle threw for two touch-
downs against the Cowboys for
197 — one more than the career
mark set by Bobby Layne.
The old Bald Eagle was su-
perb in the second half as the
Giants came from behind a 27-
14 halftime deficit, but he was
less than sharp in the first half,
when he had three passes inter-
cepted.
Hoyt Wilhelm of the Chicago
White Sox has turned in 74 vic-
tories as a relief pitcher during
his career.
•
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•
HINTS f from
HELOISE
by Heloise Cruse
DEAR HELOISE:
Our drycleaning business is
over 100 years old. With refer-
ence to cleaning curtains and
draperies, here is why we have
to accept them at "owner's
risk ":
Many fabrics have white or
very light backgrounds, which
become yellow and streaky from
sun, household smoking, furnace
gasses, and general exposure.
If an afternoon's exposure on
a sunny day at the beach can
burn us, then what must hap-
pen to curtains and draperies
hanging at windows for weeks
and months?
Curtains at windows which
are never open, can develop
ABOUT TV
Cynthia
Says ...
—. By CYNTHIA LOWRY ._
AP Television -Radio Writer
NEW YORK (MI — NBC's
"Show of the Week," whose
Sunday night dramatic pro-
grams too often are rather flab-
by, Sunday night turned up a
taut shocker.
It. was called "Ride With Ter-
ror," a story about two punks
cowing a dozen passengers on
a late night subway train.
The hoodlums were first
shown as they robbed an elder-
ly man of $8 and then beat him
senseless for kicks. Then we
followed the train as it picked
up passengers, an unattractive
lot except for one.
THE P U N K S swaggered
aboard and began to torture,
humiliate and frighten the pas-
sengers in turn.
One or two spoke up hesitantly
and an elderly man flared out
at the young hoodlums briefly.
The rest just sat there. Nobody
wanted to get involved.
Eventually one of the two
soldiers aboard took on the pair,
an(I the grim ride came to a
quick, bloody end.
The passengers scurried away,
stepping over a drunk who had
rolled onto the floor.
One suspects that author
Nicholas Baehr was saying
something rather basic about
people and modern attitudes. It
was pretty obvious that iii the
passengers had gotten together
early, the bullies would never
have tried anything.
THE WORLD'S Greatest
Showman," NBC's appreciation
of the late Cecil B. DeMille—
started Sunday night with a
scene in which Victor Mature
as Samson pushed over the great
stone pillars. And for the next'
90 minutes some of DeMille's
stars — including Gloria Swan-
son, James Stewart, Cornel
Wilde and Yul Brynner— talked
about the famous director.
The show could have been
shortened by at least a half
hour, but it was a pleasant pro-
gram.
RECOMMENDED t o n i g h t:
"The Danny Thomas Show,"
CBS, 9 -9:30 (EST) —Guest star-
ring the Irish Clancy Brothers,
Tommy Makem and Barbara
Mullen in a pilot film for a new
series.
Monday
A
Evening
Television
(KBTX -TV Channel 3)
BRYAN
5:30 CBS News
6:00 Local News
6:10 Sports
6:16 Weather
6:23 World News
6:3n To Tell the Truth
7:00 I've Got a Secret
7:30 The Lucy Show
8:00 The Detectives
8:30 Andy Griffith
9:00 Ben Casey
10:00 World News
10:10 Local News
10:18 Weather
10:25 Sports
10:30 77 Sunset Strip
11:30 Mike Hammer
(KCEN -TV Channel 6)
TEMPLE
6:30 Monday Night at the
the Movies
8:30 Hollywood and the Stars
9:00 Sing Along with Mitch
10:Or News
10:08 State and Local News
10:16 Weather
10:24 Sports
10:30 Tonight
(KTBC -TV Channel 7)
AUSTIN
5:30 Huntley- Brinkley
6:00 Sports
6:10 Weather
6:15 Paul Bolton News
6:30 Wagon Train
8:00 Danny Thomas
8:30 Andy Griffith
9:00 Darrell Royal
9:30 Detectives
10:00 News Night
10:30 Richard Boone
11:30 News Final
water marks — COLD fabric
zondenses water the same as
glass panes.
Novelty fabrics, of course, are
treated solely for appearance
and not for durability. Many
wash and wear" fabrics stand
up well if dipped in the tub
every other week or two, but
do not react as well when left
hanging a year before being
sent to the cleaner.
The actual damage is done at
the window and does not be-
come apparent until the cleans-
ing and finishing.
Many of today's curtain and
drapery fabrics do shrink, in
spite of our best efforts to keep
them to size, even with special
stretching equipment. Why not
be prepared for such shrinkage,
and have extra wide hems, so
that you or your decorator could
let out the extra material when
being cleaned?
Examine your curtains and
draperies carefully at least every
other month. Dust them or vac-
uum them periodically. You
may be surprised at their con-
dition!
MR. L. H. DALOZ
DEAR HELOISE:
After years of washing and
ironing pillowcases which were
yellow from hair pomades and
soon wear out from frequent
laundering ... I finally bought
a couple yards of pretty flow-
ered outing and made a pair of
pillow cases. These turned out
so nicely that I made more.
They not only look nice but
wash easily, need no starch or
ironing and are nice and cozy.
These are just the thing for
the men in the family who use
heavy hair oils and it is a work -
saver for the busy housewife.
In fact . . . these cases are
now in all our relatives' homes
and they are begging me to
make more.
Other tired wives should
make some.
MRS. F. JIMENEZ
s * +
LETTER OF LAUGHTER
DEAR HELOISE:
I have heard of people put-
ting raisins on mousetraps, but
an easier hint is to smear pea-
nut butter on it! My mice
"swipe" the cheese on me until
I get so mad I go back to the
r. He can't swipe
peanut butte e p
THAT.
GLADYS B.
DEAR HELOISE:
.Here's a way to carry flrjpr
wax upstairs without lugging a
big can around:
Pour your wax into a small
squeeze bottle with a removable
top (such as detergents come in)
and label the small bottle "Floor
Wax'
Makes it easy to carry around
from room to room and all you
have to do is turn the LITTLE
bottle over and squeeze. Sure
saves time and energy.
LAURENE GERBER
DEAR HELOISE:
Here is a tip for mothers who
are on a budget and like to
stretch that meat loaf and at
the same time use those leftover
dabs of chicken, ham, corn beef,
bacon, and just about anything
that happens to be in the ice
box:
Take your meat grinder and
grind it up and put it in with
some fresh meat!
It not only stretches "THE"
pound of hamburger you bought
changes the taste e of the
g
meat into something besides
just plain ground beef mea".loaf.
GERALDINE GREEN
DEAR HELOISE:
My method for cleaning a
"gooky" can opener is this:
Dunk the whole thing in a
dish of ammonia and water ..
or a strong solution of your
favorite household cleanser .. .
and soak a while and then scrub
it hard with an old toothbrush.
Repeat the above process if
necessary. To keep it clean aft-
erwards wash it with an old
toothbrush in the dishwasher
every few days.
A READER
• • •
Heloise welcomes all mail, es-
pecially household hints which
she can pass on to readers as
space permits. However, because
of the tremendous volume of
mail she receives daily, Heloise
is unable to answer all individ-
ual letters. She will answer
readers' questions in her column
whenever possible.
s • •
Copyright, 1963, King
Features Syndicate, Inc.
Headless Peter, a drummer
boy who was rubbed and be-
headed a few centuries ago, is
said to appear regularly at Dov-
er Castle, England, beating a
ghostly tattoo as he marches
through the corridors.
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• GIANT — 16-OZ. 29c Sauerkraut BAVARIAN .... NO. 303 CAN 17
Giant Joy SIZE 63c Spic & Span SIZE ........................ STYLE. ...........c:
Tammy Doll
By Ideal
12" high— moving arms
and legs— teased hair ' •99
style.
Amerman Flyer New! Aero Electric
Freight Train Jet Streak Oven Toaster
4-car Casey Jones Complete with safe end U. L. Approved — broils,
3 $$ toasts, grills, bakes. and
Model complete with 3 44
transformer. 8•88 harmless jet propellent. • •
lee +s.
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■
PRO GRID
STANDINGS
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Conference
Won Lost Tied
Pct.
New York .................9 3 0
.750
Cleveland ....................9 3 0
.750
St. Louis ....................a 4 0
.667
Pittsburgh ..................6 3 3
.667
Dallas ...................3 9 0
.250
Washington ...............3 9 0
.250
Philadelphia .............2 8 2
.200
Western Conference
Chicago . .................... 9 1 2
No
Green Bay ...............9 2 1
.818
Baltimore .................6 6 0
.500
Los Angeles ...........5 7 0
.417
Detroit .......................4 7 1
.364
Minnesota .................4 7 1
.364
San Francisco .........2 10 0
.167
Sunday's Results
Baltimore 36, Washington 20
Cleveland 24, St. Louis 10
Los Angeles 21, San Francisco
17
Minnesota 17, Chicago 17, tie
New York 34, Dallas 27
Philadelphia 20, Pittsburgh 20
tie
Saturday's Game
Green Bay at Los Angeles
Sunday's Games
Cleveland at Detroit
Minnesota at Baltimore
Philadelphia at St. Louis
Pittsburgh at Dallas
san Francisco at Chicago
Washington at New York
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
Won Lost Tied
Pct.
Houston .....................6 5 0
.545
Boston ........................6 5 1
.545
New York .................5 S 1
.500
Buffalo .. ..................5 6 1
.455
Western Division
San Diego ...............9 2 0
.818
Oakland ....................7 4 0
.636
Kansas City .............2 7 2
.222
Denver ... ................2 8 1
.200
Sunday's Results
San Diego 27, Houston 0
Boston 17, Buffalo 7
New York 17, Kansas City 0
Sunday's Games
San Diego at Oakland
Denver at Kansas City
Boston at Houston
New York at Buffalo
Baylor flanker Lawrence
El-
kins was a state half -mile cham-
pion at Brownwood.
•
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Comes
New
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•
HINTS f from
HELOISE
by Heloise Cruse
DEAR HELOISE:
Our drycleaning business is
over 100 years old. With refer-
ence to cleaning curtains and
draperies, here is why we have
to accept them at "owner's
risk ":
Many fabrics have white or
very light backgrounds, which
become yellow and streaky from
sun, household smoking, furnace
gasses, and general exposure.
If an afternoon's exposure on
a sunny day at the beach can
burn us, then what must hap-
pen to curtains and draperies
hanging at windows for weeks
and months?
Curtains at windows which
are never open, can develop
ABOUT TV
Cynthia
Says ...
—. By CYNTHIA LOWRY ._
AP Television -Radio Writer
NEW YORK (MI — NBC's
"Show of the Week," whose
Sunday night dramatic pro-
grams too often are rather flab-
by, Sunday night turned up a
taut shocker.
It. was called "Ride With Ter-
ror," a story about two punks
cowing a dozen passengers on
a late night subway train.
The hoodlums were first
shown as they robbed an elder-
ly man of $8 and then beat him
senseless for kicks. Then we
followed the train as it picked
up passengers, an unattractive
lot except for one.
THE P U N K S swaggered
aboard and began to torture,
humiliate and frighten the pas-
sengers in turn.
One or two spoke up hesitantly
and an elderly man flared out
at the young hoodlums briefly.
The rest just sat there. Nobody
wanted to get involved.
Eventually one of the two
soldiers aboard took on the pair,
an(I the grim ride came to a
quick, bloody end.
The passengers scurried away,
stepping over a drunk who had
rolled onto the floor.
One suspects that author
Nicholas Baehr was saying
something rather basic about
people and modern attitudes. It
was pretty obvious that iii the
passengers had gotten together
early, the bullies would never
have tried anything.
THE WORLD'S Greatest
Showman," NBC's appreciation
of the late Cecil B. DeMille—
started Sunday night with a
scene in which Victor Mature
as Samson pushed over the great
stone pillars. And for the next'
90 minutes some of DeMille's
stars — including Gloria Swan-
son, James Stewart, Cornel
Wilde and Yul Brynner— talked
about the famous director.
The show could have been
shortened by at least a half
hour, but it was a pleasant pro-
gram.
RECOMMENDED t o n i g h t:
"The Danny Thomas Show,"
CBS, 9 -9:30 (EST) —Guest star-
ring the Irish Clancy Brothers,
Tommy Makem and Barbara
Mullen in a pilot film for a new
series.
Monday
A
Evening
Television
(KBTX -TV Channel 3)
BRYAN
5:30 CBS News
6:00 Local News
6:10 Sports
6:16 Weather
6:23 World News
6:3n To Tell the Truth
7:00 I've Got a Secret
7:30 The Lucy Show
8:00 The Detectives
8:30 Andy Griffith
9:00 Ben Casey
10:00 World News
10:10 Local News
10:18 Weather
10:25 Sports
10:30 77 Sunset Strip
11:30 Mike Hammer
(KCEN -TV Channel 6)
TEMPLE
6:30 Monday Night at the
the Movies
8:30 Hollywood and the Stars
9:00 Sing Along with Mitch
10:Or News
10:08 State and Local News
10:16 Weather
10:24 Sports
10:30 Tonight
(KTBC -TV Channel 7)
AUSTIN
5:30 Huntley- Brinkley
6:00 Sports
6:10 Weather
6:15 Paul Bolton News
6:30 Wagon Train
8:00 Danny Thomas
8:30 Andy Griffith
9:00 Darrell Royal
9:30 Detectives
10:00 News Night
10:30 Richard Boone
11:30 News Final
water marks — COLD fabric
zondenses water the same as
glass panes.
Novelty fabrics, of course, are
treated solely for appearance
and not for durability. Many
wash and wear" fabrics stand
up well if dipped in the tub
every other week or two, but
do not react as well when left
hanging a year before being
sent to the cleaner.
The actual damage is done at
the window and does not be-
come apparent until the cleans-
ing and finishing.
Many of today's curtain and
drapery fabrics do shrink, in
spite of our best efforts to keep
them to size, even with special
stretching equipment. Why not
be prepared for such shrinkage,
and have extra wide hems, so
that you or your decorator could
let out the extra material when
being cleaned?
Examine your curtains and
draperies carefully at least every
other month. Dust them or vac-
uum them periodically. You
may be surprised at their con-
dition!
MR. L. H. DALOZ
DEAR HELOISE:
After years of washing and
ironing pillowcases which were
yellow from hair pomades and
soon wear out from frequent
laundering ... I finally bought
a couple yards of pretty flow-
ered outing and made a pair of
pillow cases. These turned out
so nicely that I made more.
They not only look nice but
wash easily, need no starch or
ironing and are nice and cozy.
These are just the thing for
the men in the family who use
heavy hair oils and it is a work -
saver for the busy housewife.
In fact . . . these cases are
now in all our relatives' homes
and they are begging me to
make more.
Other tired wives should
make some.
MRS. F. JIMENEZ
s * +
LETTER OF LAUGHTER
DEAR HELOISE:
I have heard of people put-
ting raisins on mousetraps, but
an easier hint is to smear pea-
nut butter on it! My mice
"swipe" the cheese on me until
I get so mad I go back to the
r. He can't swipe
peanut butte e p
THAT.
GLADYS B.
DEAR HELOISE:
.Here's a way to carry flrjpr
wax upstairs without lugging a
big can around:
Pour your wax into a small
squeeze bottle with a removable
top (such as detergents come in)
and label the small bottle "Floor
Wax'
Makes it easy to carry around
from room to room and all you
have to do is turn the LITTLE
bottle over and squeeze. Sure
saves time and energy.
LAURENE GERBER
DEAR HELOISE:
Here is a tip for mothers who
are on a budget and like to
stretch that meat loaf and at
the same time use those leftover
dabs of chicken, ham, corn beef,
bacon, and just about anything
that happens to be in the ice
box:
Take your meat grinder and
grind it up and put it in with
some fresh meat!
It not only stretches "THE"
pound of hamburger you bought
changes the taste e of the
g
meat into something besides
just plain ground beef mea".loaf.
GERALDINE GREEN
DEAR HELOISE:
My method for cleaning a
"gooky" can opener is this:
Dunk the whole thing in a
dish of ammonia and water ..
or a strong solution of your
favorite household cleanser .. .
and soak a while and then scrub
it hard with an old toothbrush.
Repeat the above process if
necessary. To keep it clean aft-
erwards wash it with an old
toothbrush in the dishwasher
every few days.
A READER
• • •
Heloise welcomes all mail, es-
pecially household hints which
she can pass on to readers as
space permits. However, because
of the tremendous volume of
mail she receives daily, Heloise
is unable to answer all individ-
ual letters. She will answer
readers' questions in her column
whenever possible.
s • •
Copyright, 1963, King
Features Syndicate, Inc.
Headless Peter, a drummer
boy who was rubbed and be-
headed a few centuries ago, is
said to appear regularly at Dov-
er Castle, England, beating a
ghostly tattoo as he marches
through the corridors.
SLIM YOUR
FIGURE
MASSAGE
BELT
Rent or Buy
$10 PER
MONTH
DELIVERED
KRAFT
FURNITURE CO.
CALL TA 2 -5019
THE
PERFECT
GIFT!
SPRINq CREST NYLON
Sheer mesh and plain knit
in tones of beige and
taupe. Sizes
9 to I I
■
Lunch
v y
•
e:
9
1 -LB. PKG• — W —
1 -Lb. RED P +. 16 - Oa. 53c
Cracker Karo Syrup LABEL .......................Btl. ..........
30c Spray Starc FAULTLESS......Ne+ .7JJ
GAYLA Pk9.
Meat HAFNIA C
12 -OZ. Z.
CAN
CUT 100 27c
j Plastic Wrap RITE........ .............
MILK
121/2.0
Bunte Drops CHOCOLATE 29c
........
TSo. 3M IS Stick
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FOOD CLUB C
Tall Cans
Evaporated 10
Crunch Cake ORANGE 49c Danish Rolls BLUE ...... ..
PINEAPPLE ................. 6 For 39c
BERRY .....
C
o ado Jumbo Av
Each 9
ROME JUICY Ea. OVEN
Apples - Sc c Tan erines FRESH — -- - ^- 3C Jelly Clusters . 27c
BEAUTY FRESH
FRESH BOSTON C
k
BUTT LBO 29
o r o s RONEW
35c Pork Loins DUARTER 49c Pork Chops RIB
FRESH .......................Lb. SLICED .......................Lb. CUT ...............
Pork Steak ........Lb. 5 Ci
OI CUT
MORRELL .
b -Or
C UT 23 c
s
..P
Pk g.
49c Elna Che ....
Meat
S LICE D .. .
Lunch Lb.
Pork Cho .......................Lb. 65c PRIDE .....................
Ch Cotta e C.hee e op
C
9 LB. CTN. 21
GIANT GIANT 77 Giant Cheer GIANT
Giant Tide BOX ..................... ..... Giant Oxydol BOX ...................... BOX ........................ 75c
75c
• GIANT — 16-OZ. 29c Sauerkraut BAVARIAN .... NO. 303 CAN 17
Giant Joy SIZE 63c Spic & Span SIZE ........................ STYLE. ...........c:
Tammy Doll
By Ideal
12" high— moving arms
and legs— teased hair ' •99
style.
Amerman Flyer New! Aero Electric
Freight Train Jet Streak Oven Toaster
4-car Casey Jones Complete with safe end U. L. Approved — broils,
3 $$ toasts, grills, bakes. and
Model complete with 3 44
transformer. 8•88 harmless jet propellent. • •
lee +s.
®
6=TRANSISTOR
COMPLETE WITH
POCKET SIZE! eA LUTHER R G E E,
Boxed Assorted
Christmas Cards
Assorfed Styles -50 77 c cards and 50 envelopes
■
FOUR THE BRYAN DAILY EAGLE, BRYAN -C.S., TEXAS MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1965
Littl Lady Got Her Man ,
In Oregon Log Ca
By JOY MILLER searching more for a job than after she overheard a couple
AP Women's Editor a husband when she became of loggers talking about it on
NEW YORK (R) — "A logging second cook in a logging camp a park bench one day.
camp is still a fertile area for a dozen years ago. She never regretted her deci-
women to get husbands," Irma She was past 30 and a notable sion, she says. Out a it came a
Lee Emmerson says judiciously. non - success at making a living. husband, a happy marriage and
"But if I were doing it now She failed typing tests, flunked a recently published book, "The
I might also consider eastern out of nursing, produced seven Woods Were Full of Men
Oregon, where there are so long novels nobody wanted to
many big ranches — with big publish. At the camp, she recalls, she'd
ranchers." Tired of sponging off a fond get up every morning at 4:30 or
Actually Irma Lee, 5- foot -2, sister and brother -in -law, Irma earlier, and start fixing break -
blonde and fragile - looking, was Lee asked for the cooking job fast for the 60 loggers.
Where Do All
The Days Go?
BY NITA NEWBERRY
Women's Editor
Everyone was busily turning over calendars to- 1
day. No matter how you prepare yourself, it's still
a shock to see December is here already.
December is here and I haven't even done the
things I was going to do on the Fourth of July or
Labor Day. Everytime I get in a tight spot over time
I remember those schedules we were taught to keep
in school. I didn't learn that lesson very well.
I'm reminded of a friend of mine who had a
schedule for everything, including smoking cigarettes.
She never, ever varied her time table. She always
managed to fit some form of recreation into her plan
for the day and would announce early in the morning
that she had it on her schedule to play bridge between
8 and 9 that night. I've often wondered how she fit in
Getting married into her schedule, but she managed.
Ti ! _ , ns. subways and planes could use her services for
timetable planning.
The closest I've come to making a schedule is
making a list of things I need to do in one day. I
might have been able to do everything on one of those
lists if I hadn't lost everyone. Right now I'm worried
about how I can get all my Christmas shopping done
before Washington's birthday.
•
occ a C
MONDAY
Industrial Education Wives'
Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the
YMCA Cashion Room. Mrs.
Bunny Stevenson will present
the program with hints for holi-
day entertaining and cooking.
Petroleum Engineering Wives'
Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the
home of Mrs. A. W. Talash,
114 Poplar, College Station. Mrs.
R- L. Whiting+ will be guest
speaker.
Electrical Engineering Wives'
Club regular meeting will be
held at 8 p.m. in the YMCA. A
program on "Holiday Hints" is
planned. Hostesses will be Lynn
Goers and Janice Caylor.
Range and Wildlife Manage-
ment Wives' Club will meet
with Mrs. Ed Michael, Apt. 13—
A Project Housing, at 7:30 p.m.
Dress for the meeting will be
casual.
TUESDAY
Christmas goodies and gifts
will be displayed by members at
the Bryan Garden Club meeting
at the Woman's Club. Coffee
will be served beginning at 9:30
a.m.
A &M Women's Social Club
g"^ group will meet at 9:15
a c: i uesday in the Texas A &M
University Memorial Student
SAF E' ' WAY
•
Radio Dispatched
For Fast Service
CALL —
TA 2 -1400
—OR—
TA 2 -1373
24 -HOUR SERVICE
After making five gallons of
batter for hotcakes, she'd work
on the rest of the meal, which
included coffee, potatoes, eggs,
toast, bacon, ham or sausage,
dry cereal and fruit.
The loggers took along a
hearty lunch when they left for
the woods at 6:30.
"When they came back at
night" says Irma Lee, "they
were so dirty you couldn't rec-
ognize them. But when they
went in to supper at 6 p.m. it
would do you good to see how
they had cleaned up in fresh
shirts and slicked their hair l
back. They came so eagerly —
prancing in single file, you felt
like taking a bow."
The loggers — rugged he -men
that they were — "were chival-
rous to a good woman, almost
reverent," says Irma Lee. "They
raised a little hell themselves on
Saturday night, but they never
did at camp."
The pert little cook survived
various adventures in flood and
drought and fire. Once during a
fire she was told to store her
most valuable possessions in a
safe place away from her cabin.
She did. It turned out later she i
had tucked them into a stack
of dynamite.
Now Irma Lee and Edison
Smith, the logger she married,
and their cat Sis live on a little
farm at Gaston, Ore., 30 miles
�aLenClar
Center Social Room. Reserva-
tions are to be made by noon
Monday with Mrs. Louis Nor -
nicker.
The AAUW Nonwestern Cul-
ture Group studying Chinese
literature will meet at 10 a.m.
in the home of Mrs. Horace
Blank, 719 Meadow Lane. The
study will be on Confucius.
WEDNESDAY
Newcomers' Club will meet at
10 a.m. to tour Duncan Hall on
the Texas A &M University cam-
pus. At noon members and
their husbands will have lunch
at the hall.
Oceanography and Meteorology
Wives' Club will sponsor a style
show at 8 p.m. in the Memorial
Student Center Assembly Room.
Guests are welcome to attend.
Bryan - College Station Knife
and Fork Club dinner meeting is
set for 7:30 p.m. in the MSC
Ballroom. Speaker will be
humorist George Bailey.
THURSDAY
Handicraft Group of the A &M
Women's Social Club will meet
at 9:30 a.m. in the home of Mrs.
George Fraps, 302 Walton, Col-
lege Station. Mrs. Ed Kerlick
will be co- hostess.
AAUW Oriental Thought
Study Group studying Budd-
hism will meet at 9:45 a.m. with
Mrs. C. R. Moorehead, 302 Fair-
way Dr.
Industrial Engineering Wives'
Club business meeting will be
held at 8 p.m. in the Industrial
Engineering Building on the sec-
ond floor. A program on Christ-
mas decorations will follow.
FRIDAY
Tour of the home of Mrs. J.
E. Oliver by the A &M Garden
Club has been postponed. The
tour has been re- scheduled for
Thursday, Dec. 12.
MinI'm sup l
i�c, "ke. Aa��
� F
923 So.Co11egeAye- BryanT0As
from Portland and raise straw-
berries.
Her acquired skill in whip-
ping up 300 biscuits and 200
eggs and countless hotcakes for
a hungry crew is gradually atro-
phying from disuse. Her tall
handsome husband, now that
he's away from the rigorous log-
ging life, has developed a weight
problem, and she is helping him
watch his diet.
But sometimes when she gets
out a frying pan —and dutifully
puts it back —she feels a little
wistful.
Grand jury
Meets Friday
Seven criminal cases will be
examined Friday by the Brazos
County Grand Jury.
A Assistant District
According to n t
Attorney Charles T. Conaway,
the charges range from assault
with intent to murder to felony
theft.
The grand jury returned 1.1
indictments during its last ses-
sion Oct. 17.
School Fare
Anson Jones Parent - Teachers
Association will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday for its annual
band and choir concert.
The annual concert will be
performed in the gymnasium
under the direction of Gerald W.
Hobbs, band and choir director.
Daughter Born
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Routt of
Galveston announce the birth
of a daughter, Kirsten Lee, on
Nov. 21. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Folweiler
of College Station and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Weldon Lee Routt of Temple.
Add' a teaspoon of grated
orange rind to a package of va-
nilla pudding at the same time
you add the milk and cook as
usual. Chill and serve with curls
of semi -sweet chocolate as a
garnish. The orange and choco-
late flavors are extremely com-
patible!
1963-1964 TEXAS A &M
UNIVERSITY
CALENDAR �
}
0N,.75 C o �
Now Available at MSC Gift Shop
• 8 x 11 Inch Size
• Each Month Illustrated
• College Activities Listed
• Use On Notebooks or On Wall
Mail Orders Tot
SLOUCH, BOX 4121, COLLEGE STATION
.36 0
Christmas Parade Thursday
Will Have 22
Float Entries
A gala Christmas parade is
Gray met with several assis-
on the docket for 7 p.m.
tants and chamber of com-
Thursday in downtown Bry-
merce officials this morning
an.
to iron out details of the pa-
Sponsored by the Bryan-
rade. Twelve bands will
College Station Chamber of
march in the parade.
Commerce, the parade will in-
The freshman drill team
clude 22 floats, 18 of which
and the color guard from Tex -
will be in competition for
as A &M University will par -
prize money.
ticipate in the parade.
Parade officials have not
Here's a look at the parade
determined the place for San-
route: from 27th Street south
to Claus to ride in the parade.
on Bryan to 28th Street; east
In past years, the jolly old
on 28th Street to Main; north
gentleman from the North
on Main to 21st Street; west
Pole has ridden in the last
on 21st Street to Bryan, and
float.
south on Bryan to the point of
Parade starter C. E. (Red)
origin.
PHONE TA 2 -3707 FOR CLASSIFIED ADS
Tea at Wamble Home Honors P
Pythian Sisters
Supper, Meeting
Future Pride, C
Camelia Lee S
Set on Tuesday
Pythian Sisters of Brazos
Mrs. John R. Wheelan, Mrs. M
Mrs. Ray Harold Copus alter- T
Temple No. 78, Bryan, will meet
Ervin B. Conway and Mrs. A. n
nated serving spiced tea. Dainty a
at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
Cecil Wamble honored Miss Ca- p
petits fours and party sand- h
home of Mrs. John Bishop for
melia Lee, bride -elect of Mich- w
wiches were also served from a
a business meeting and covered
ael Hanemann with a tea Fri- t
the net draped table, all carry- d
dish supper.
day afternoon. i
ing out the chosen colors. M
Mrs. Ruby Ledbetter of Mc-
Bridal colors of pink and C
Gregor, district deputy, will be
white were featured throughout W
Cathy Conway and Linda G
an honor guest for the supper
the reception rooms of the Wam- a
Whlid thith a
and meeting. There will be an
ble home. e
i
in entertaining. b
exchange of Christmas gifts and
Camelia's mother, Mrs. Wil- T
The hostesses presented the a
a party after the meeting. All
bur J. Lee and the future h
honoree with a gift of silver. m
members and families are asked
groom's mother, Mrs. E. J. Han- T
The honoree, mothers and mem- t
to attend.
emannn joined the hostesses in b
bers of the houseparty were
greeting guests. p
presented with corsages for the M
More than 10 million Africans
Mrs._ Roy V. Simmons and o
occasion. s
speak Swahili.
Winn s Early -Week Specials "
SHORTENING newel 31e �a� 49`
LIBBY
SOUR PICKLES
FRENCH'S
MUSTARD, ------ - --
ROSE - DALE
PEARS --------------- - --
NORTHERN
NAPKINS
22 -0:. 350
6 -O:. 10¢
---- - - - - -- -Jar
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Boxes
BREMNER
JUMBO PIES_
PLANTERS
MIXED NUTS
NESTLE'S
CANDY BARS PURINA— GRADE 'A'
MEDIUM EGGS
1 2's 39
13 %s -Oz. 89
10 For 39
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V2 gal 19�
SAVE MONEY, MONEY AND ENJAY GOOD BEEF
FROM WINN'S ! !
• BABY BEEF SPECIALS •
CROWN ROAST— L ean and Tender_ 39 0
CHUCK ROAST— and Lean-------- - - - - -- __- _ _.Lb. 49¢
SHOULDER STEAK— L,.n and Tender- 49
RIB STEAK —Lean and Tender- ___.____- ___.__ _____-__Lb. 59¢
BRISKET STEW MEAT— 35
FRESH G MEAT Lbs.
SLICED BACON _,5wift Premium---- ----------------------- - --Lb. 45"
FROM CHOICE BABY BEEF!
• HOME FREEZER •
10-LB. BOXES —CUT, WRAPPED AND FROZEN I
ROUND STEAK _ 10 Lb.. 7 .90
SIRLOIN STEAK____ - __ 10 Lb,. 7.90
T -BONE STEAK 10 Lb.. 8.90
VEAL CUTLETS _- ______ -.__ 10 I.N. 9.90
SHOULDER STEAK 30 Lb,. 4.90
RIB CHOPS -- - - - -- _ 10 Lb ,. p 5 � .90
GROUND MEAT -- - - - - - - - -------------------- - - - -10 Us. 3 -90
* FEED LOT FANCY BEEF
HINDQUARTER__. -- __ ................. 59
HALF...................................... ......................... Lb. 49
FOREQUARTER .... ............................Lb. 45"
WE ALSO HAVE CHOICE HEAVY BEEF
FROM TEXAS A &M UNIVERSITY !
ROUND STEAK
1
*79
LOINSTEAK .--• ................ ............................Lb. 79
AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY 79¢ Tax
BAYER ASIRIN Cou . ---------- ..._.._........ 59¢ T ar s
PINTO BEANS
C
2 L 19
TOP KICK �
DOG FOOD ......... .............................12 Cans 89¢
KOBEY — SHOESTRING
POTATOES ........... _ ................................... Can 00 10
1-Lb.
GULF SALT Box.... ............... .................... For 19
PLASTIC
WASTE BASKET . .............................. 20 - 79
PLASTIC
With 0
CEREAL BOWL Cup. Matchin9--...•_....____..Set 45
STAR - KIST
TUN 2,S
C
DOUBLE BIG BONDS STA
PRICES GOOD MON. - TUES. - WED. — DEC.2 - 3 - 4
RUMP ROAST ................... ......................... Lb. 7 5 0
PIKES PEAK ROAST .-- -_.. -_ Lb. 75¢
I L
WESSON 0
• C
lar size
29
FRESH
C BB E
C
LB-
ALL - PURPOSE
POTATOES .................... ..•.10 - Ba 39¢
4
BAG APPLES ...... ..................... ......... 4 Ba9 39
FRESH CE ¢
CELERY .................. ..• -- ... - - - -- -Stalk 10
AMPS TUESDAY PURHA OR MORE I
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
"YOU CANT LOSE AT W/NN'S"
SU PE R
3800 TEXAS AVENUE BRYAN, TEXAS
STORE HOURS — MON. THRU SAT. — 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M.
ALL POPULAR BRANDS
WHITE BREAD _ 2 ' Voa e; 49¢
ALL POPULAR BRANDS
FRESH MILK__ —__- __._._Gal. Ju 79¢
KRATF MIRACLE
MARGARINE ____,__________ 31
KRAFT
PEACH PRESERVES _
__'$ °;' 45¢
MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 THE BRYAN DAILY EAGLE, BRYAN -C.S.. TEXAS FIVt
LITTLE GIRL, BIG PROBLEM
Rita Maria Neria, 3, looked strangely alone when police spotted her taking a stroll
along a downtown street in Dallas, Texas. It didn't take long to find out why —she
was an extremely young "runaway." Her problem? "Momma found a new baby at
home," she tearfully told a friend and poli :eman. Mother and daughter were reunit-
ed later at the Juvenile Bureau and returned home. Rita's young friend is uni-
dentified. (AP Wirephoto).
Pact to Pan Nuclear Tests:
Fitting Kenne Memorial
By LEON DENNEN ed the possibility of an atomic to extend their domination to
Newspaper Enterprise Assn. holocaust. all of eastern Europe and East
NEW YORK— (NEA)— Presi- Will the new President Lyn- Germany.
dent Kennedy's outstanding don Johnson continue President Historians assent that toward
achievement in international Kennedy's foreign policies? the end of his life President
affairs lies after him; it is the Historians still speculate on Roosevelt realized that Russia
nuclear test ban agreement he what the world would have never meant to keep the agree -
recently concluded with Russia. looked like had President Roose- ments reached at Yalta.
Though he never trusted the velt been alive when the last President Lyndon Johnson is
Russians, Kennedy's foreign pol- war ended in 1945. It is a known in a different situation. He is
icy was based on the possibility fact that his successor, the then no newcomer to foreign affairs.
of coexistence with them in one Vice President Harry Truman, He has been Kennedy's close
world. He saw the bitter con- never participated actively in collaborator.
flict between Soviet Premier the conduct of foreign affairs. Nevertheless, there probably
Nikita Khrushchev and Red Thus, when Roosevelt died will be important changes in
China's Mao Tse -tung as an op- there was a vacuum in Ameri- foreign policy under the new
portunity to convince the Rus- can foreign policy. President. Lyndon Johnson is
sians their future and the fu- Truman, in faithfully carry- more conservative than Ken -
ture of the entire world depend- ing out the Yalta Agreement nedy, has less faith in the Rus-
ed on co- operation that exclud- of 1944, enabled the Russians sians.
He is expected to by to re.
k establish friendly relations
with French President De
Gaulle and stsengihen NATO
• e and other western alliances
which were in a sad state of
disinter ration In recent
Sj O' ' . ' �- • months.
Johnson doubtless will pay
By BOB THOMAS, AP Radio & TV Writer less attention to the academic
r * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * '1 advisers who were part of Pres-
By BOB THOMAS joining the ABC comedy that ident Kennedy's entourage and
AP Movie - Television Writer stars Ernest Borgnine: "Theater seek to exploit to the advantage
HOLLYWOOD (R) — Fellow business was disappearing and of the free world the conflict
performers thought it strange so were night clubs, which I between Russia and Red China.
when Carl Ballantine gave up don't like to play anyway be- The United States is the most
acts cause they keep me up too late. powerful country in the West-
one of the most successful ern alliance and the world's
in show business to become tor- There were TV guest shots, but
pedoman 2nd Class Lester Gru- how many times can you play freedom in the foreseeable deal
ber in "McHale's Na Ed Sullivan? ture will depend a great deal
"My biggest pay was from in- on President Johnson's foreign
"I think it's kind of starnge policies.
myself, says the elastic - featur- dustrial shows, but they don't
ed comedian. "I'm losing about come along too often." There is no doubt that for
Russia President Kennedy's
2,000 a week." So he enlisted with McHale
death has raised a hornets' nest.
As the Amazing Mr. Ballan- for better or worse, and he ad-
tine, he operated a hilarious, mitted that it has swung both Nikita Khrushchev, for all his
high - priced act in which his ways• duplicity, wanted to come to
some agreement with the United
card tricks ended as 52- pickup Somebody said there was no
and his disappearing birds be- such thing as small roles; only States. He needs a breathing
ed.
small actors," he crack "I spell in the Red world to mend
came a feathery pulp. his political fences and to come
HE GAVE HIS reasons for think it was Mickey Rooney. to grips with Mao Tse -tung. He
Anyway, it ain't true." exploited his on -again and off-
TROUBLE IS, he said the di- again negotiations with Presi-
rector works not on the star dent Kennedy in an effort to Cooler A i r
system, but the rank system: display his peaceful intentions.
The best stuff goes to the com- Kennedy's death is likely to
mander, Borgnine, captain, Joe unleash the anti- Khrushchev
Mo Deep
Flynn and ensign, Tim Conway. and pro - Chinese forces in
"What chance have I got— Russia. In recent weeks, Mao
a torpedoman second class!" Tse-tung has even appealed
I nto State Ballantine wailed. to Red generals to "eliminate"
Ballantine still does guest Khrushchev.
Sy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS shots as the maladroit magico Until now Khrushchev has
This is the season for one cold and plays Hollywood gatherings been able to outmaneuver his
front after another, and a fresh such as a tax assessors' conven- enemies. The death of Kennedy
one pushed across Texas toward tion. He plans to stay here may give his enemies their long
the southeast Monday, whether he keeps sailing with awaited opportunity to strike
There was another sharp McHale or not. again.
freeze in the Panhandle behind
the front, which had advanced
as far as Texarkana, Waco and
Del Rio before sunrise. The mer-
cury skidded to 21 degrees at
Dalhart.
As the cooler air approached,
light showers traipsed across
much of Central Texas during
the night and early morning.
Somewhat cooler weather was
in prospect for most sections of
the state Monday night. North-
west and North Central Texas
were expected to warm Tues-
day.
New five -day forecasts, cover-
ing the rest of the week, called
for temperatures a few degrees
below normal to a few above
with little or no moisture.
Fireball Seen
At Santone
SAN ANTONIO (R1 — Several
San Antonio residents said they
saw a large fireball with a red -
fish tail in the northwestern
skies Sunday night.
Among those reporting the
spectacle were Henry Howell,
news director of WOAI- radio.
He said the orange and white
light was visible five to six sec-
onds and appeared to burn out
before reaching the horizon.
Phone TA 2.3707 for Classified
5I NC Vii;
EN
STAMPS
'fiv! PS
GET VALUABLE GIFTS
FOR CHRISTMAS
WITH S &H GREEN
STAMPS. • . .
America's Favorite
Stamp Plan !
EVERY TUESDAY
With Purchase Of $2 Or Morel
Prices Good Mon., Tues., Wed., Dec. 2, 3, & 4
Rights Reserved to Limit
AGIC BAKE BREAD ........................... 2 ' Loaves
M * 49 0
COr1CO FOLDING TABLES b (HAIRS
IDEAL XMAS GIFT! Card Table Folding Chair
For Your Home or as a Gift Reg $'95 * Reg. $'95
Choose This Great Value in a
Folding Table and Chairs. $I 0.95 $8.95
Drug Values! ® • 19 -0Z.
C
Lady Esther NO BEANS Can 59
FACE CREAM
CHRISTMAS
Gift Wrap
3 kg' 88C
Clorox Bleach '/2 l. 29`
Juice Hunt's 46 -Oz.
Tomato Cans 1 1
S auce Hunt's s _Oz, 29 '
Tomato Cans
Skinner's Ma Ma caroni ..... 1 60 s:19c
r
ii-JR
The Bryan Daily Eagle
News Desk to You I
FRONT PAGE
NEWS
MONDAYS thru FRIDAYS
12:45 P.M.
Ku" RA
DIAL 1240
Skinner's Spaghetti ...... 1 P gs. 19c
Skinn Cut 7 -0z.
er Elb Short o Macaroni 1 Pkgs. 19C
Dog Food Delight .................... 12 2a�° 49C
Pillsbury
Apple Turnovers 14- Oz..... Pkg. 49C
Flounder Fillets ' F resh-Lock ... 1b. 65c
Kraft Cheese Sliced American
or Pimento. .12-Ox. 47 /9c
TV
Baby Limas ...... 5 Pk $1 00
Pkgs.
Birdseye Frozen
GREEN PEAS
7 ' Pkgs ' $1 00
•
COMO
TISSUE
Assorted Colors
8 Rolls 49
•
McCORMICK
VANILLA
EXTRACT
2-O
Bottle 47 ¢
Plus... S &H
GREEN STAMPS !
Oleo Good Value I -Lb.
Pure Vegetable Ctns. 1
Morton's
Di o nners Assorted 9
3
r�
Lb, i 0c
/i
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
200 E. 24th Street • 3516 Texas Ave.
Downtown Ridgecrest
Reg.
$1.49
77
Ocean Spray Fresh Cranberries
* FEED LOT FANCY BEEF
HINDQUARTER__. -- __ ................. 59
HALF...................................... ......................... Lb. 49
FOREQUARTER .... ............................Lb. 45"
WE ALSO HAVE CHOICE HEAVY BEEF
FROM TEXAS A &M UNIVERSITY !
ROUND STEAK
1
*79
LOINSTEAK .--• ................ ............................Lb. 79
AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY 79¢ Tax
BAYER ASIRIN Cou . ---------- ..._.._........ 59¢ T ar s
PINTO BEANS
C
2 L 19
TOP KICK �
DOG FOOD ......... .............................12 Cans 89¢
KOBEY — SHOESTRING
POTATOES ........... _ ................................... Can 00 10
1-Lb.
GULF SALT Box.... ............... .................... For 19
PLASTIC
WASTE BASKET . .............................. 20 - 79
PLASTIC
With 0
CEREAL BOWL Cup. Matchin9--...•_....____..Set 45
STAR - KIST
TUN 2,S
C
DOUBLE BIG BONDS STA
PRICES GOOD MON. - TUES. - WED. — DEC.2 - 3 - 4
RUMP ROAST ................... ......................... Lb. 7 5 0
PIKES PEAK ROAST .-- -_.. -_ Lb. 75¢
I L
WESSON 0
• C
lar size
29
FRESH
C BB E
C
LB-
ALL - PURPOSE
POTATOES .................... ..•.10 - Ba 39¢
4
BAG APPLES ...... ..................... ......... 4 Ba9 39
FRESH CE ¢
CELERY .................. ..• -- ... - - - -- -Stalk 10
AMPS TUESDAY PURHA OR MORE I
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
"YOU CANT LOSE AT W/NN'S"
SU PE R
3800 TEXAS AVENUE BRYAN, TEXAS
STORE HOURS — MON. THRU SAT. — 8 A.M. TO 8 P.M.
ALL POPULAR BRANDS
WHITE BREAD _ 2 ' Voa e; 49¢
ALL POPULAR BRANDS
FRESH MILK__ —__- __._._Gal. Ju 79¢
KRATF MIRACLE
MARGARINE ____,__________ 31
KRAFT
PEACH PRESERVES _
__'$ °;' 45¢
MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 THE BRYAN DAILY EAGLE, BRYAN -C.S.. TEXAS FIVt
LITTLE GIRL, BIG PROBLEM
Rita Maria Neria, 3, looked strangely alone when police spotted her taking a stroll
along a downtown street in Dallas, Texas. It didn't take long to find out why —she
was an extremely young "runaway." Her problem? "Momma found a new baby at
home," she tearfully told a friend and poli :eman. Mother and daughter were reunit-
ed later at the Juvenile Bureau and returned home. Rita's young friend is uni-
dentified. (AP Wirephoto).
Pact to Pan Nuclear Tests:
Fitting Kenne Memorial
By LEON DENNEN ed the possibility of an atomic to extend their domination to
Newspaper Enterprise Assn. holocaust. all of eastern Europe and East
NEW YORK— (NEA)— Presi- Will the new President Lyn- Germany.
dent Kennedy's outstanding don Johnson continue President Historians assent that toward
achievement in international Kennedy's foreign policies? the end of his life President
affairs lies after him; it is the Historians still speculate on Roosevelt realized that Russia
nuclear test ban agreement he what the world would have never meant to keep the agree -
recently concluded with Russia. looked like had President Roose- ments reached at Yalta.
Though he never trusted the velt been alive when the last President Lyndon Johnson is
Russians, Kennedy's foreign pol- war ended in 1945. It is a known in a different situation. He is
icy was based on the possibility fact that his successor, the then no newcomer to foreign affairs.
of coexistence with them in one Vice President Harry Truman, He has been Kennedy's close
world. He saw the bitter con- never participated actively in collaborator.
flict between Soviet Premier the conduct of foreign affairs. Nevertheless, there probably
Nikita Khrushchev and Red Thus, when Roosevelt died will be important changes in
China's Mao Tse -tung as an op- there was a vacuum in Ameri- foreign policy under the new
portunity to convince the Rus- can foreign policy. President. Lyndon Johnson is
sians their future and the fu- Truman, in faithfully carry- more conservative than Ken -
ture of the entire world depend- ing out the Yalta Agreement nedy, has less faith in the Rus-
ed on co- operation that exclud- of 1944, enabled the Russians sians.
He is expected to by to re.
k establish friendly relations
with French President De
Gaulle and stsengihen NATO
• e and other western alliances
which were in a sad state of
disinter ration In recent
Sj O' ' . ' �- • months.
Johnson doubtless will pay
By BOB THOMAS, AP Radio & TV Writer less attention to the academic
r * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * '1 advisers who were part of Pres-
By BOB THOMAS joining the ABC comedy that ident Kennedy's entourage and
AP Movie - Television Writer stars Ernest Borgnine: "Theater seek to exploit to the advantage
HOLLYWOOD (R) — Fellow business was disappearing and of the free world the conflict
performers thought it strange so were night clubs, which I between Russia and Red China.
when Carl Ballantine gave up don't like to play anyway be- The United States is the most
acts cause they keep me up too late. powerful country in the West-
one of the most successful ern alliance and the world's
in show business to become tor- There were TV guest shots, but
pedoman 2nd Class Lester Gru- how many times can you play freedom in the foreseeable deal
ber in "McHale's Na Ed Sullivan? ture will depend a great deal
"My biggest pay was from in- on President Johnson's foreign
"I think it's kind of starnge policies.
myself, says the elastic - featur- dustrial shows, but they don't
ed comedian. "I'm losing about come along too often." There is no doubt that for
Russia President Kennedy's
2,000 a week." So he enlisted with McHale
death has raised a hornets' nest.
As the Amazing Mr. Ballan- for better or worse, and he ad-
tine, he operated a hilarious, mitted that it has swung both Nikita Khrushchev, for all his
high - priced act in which his ways• duplicity, wanted to come to
some agreement with the United
card tricks ended as 52- pickup Somebody said there was no
and his disappearing birds be- such thing as small roles; only States. He needs a breathing
ed.
small actors," he crack "I spell in the Red world to mend
came a feathery pulp. his political fences and to come
HE GAVE HIS reasons for think it was Mickey Rooney. to grips with Mao Tse -tung. He
Anyway, it ain't true." exploited his on -again and off-
TROUBLE IS, he said the di- again negotiations with Presi-
rector works not on the star dent Kennedy in an effort to Cooler A i r
system, but the rank system: display his peaceful intentions.
The best stuff goes to the com- Kennedy's death is likely to
mander, Borgnine, captain, Joe unleash the anti- Khrushchev
Mo Deep
Flynn and ensign, Tim Conway. and pro - Chinese forces in
"What chance have I got— Russia. In recent weeks, Mao
a torpedoman second class!" Tse-tung has even appealed
I nto State Ballantine wailed. to Red generals to "eliminate"
Ballantine still does guest Khrushchev.
Sy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS shots as the maladroit magico Until now Khrushchev has
This is the season for one cold and plays Hollywood gatherings been able to outmaneuver his
front after another, and a fresh such as a tax assessors' conven- enemies. The death of Kennedy
one pushed across Texas toward tion. He plans to stay here may give his enemies their long
the southeast Monday, whether he keeps sailing with awaited opportunity to strike
There was another sharp McHale or not. again.
freeze in the Panhandle behind
the front, which had advanced
as far as Texarkana, Waco and
Del Rio before sunrise. The mer-
cury skidded to 21 degrees at
Dalhart.
As the cooler air approached,
light showers traipsed across
much of Central Texas during
the night and early morning.
Somewhat cooler weather was
in prospect for most sections of
the state Monday night. North-
west and North Central Texas
were expected to warm Tues-
day.
New five -day forecasts, cover-
ing the rest of the week, called
for temperatures a few degrees
below normal to a few above
with little or no moisture.
Fireball Seen
At Santone
SAN ANTONIO (R1 — Several
San Antonio residents said they
saw a large fireball with a red -
fish tail in the northwestern
skies Sunday night.
Among those reporting the
spectacle were Henry Howell,
news director of WOAI- radio.
He said the orange and white
light was visible five to six sec-
onds and appeared to burn out
before reaching the horizon.
Phone TA 2.3707 for Classified
5I NC Vii;
EN
STAMPS
'fiv! PS
GET VALUABLE GIFTS
FOR CHRISTMAS
WITH S &H GREEN
STAMPS. • . .
America's Favorite
Stamp Plan !
EVERY TUESDAY
With Purchase Of $2 Or Morel
Prices Good Mon., Tues., Wed., Dec. 2, 3, & 4
Rights Reserved to Limit
AGIC BAKE BREAD ........................... 2 ' Loaves
M * 49 0
COr1CO FOLDING TABLES b (HAIRS
IDEAL XMAS GIFT! Card Table Folding Chair
For Your Home or as a Gift Reg $'95 * Reg. $'95
Choose This Great Value in a
Folding Table and Chairs. $I 0.95 $8.95
Drug Values! ® • 19 -0Z.
C
Lady Esther NO BEANS Can 59
FACE CREAM
CHRISTMAS
Gift Wrap
3 kg' 88C
Clorox Bleach '/2 l. 29`
Juice Hunt's 46 -Oz.
Tomato Cans 1 1
S auce Hunt's s _Oz, 29 '
Tomato Cans
Skinner's Ma Ma caroni ..... 1 60 s:19c
r
ii-JR
The Bryan Daily Eagle
News Desk to You I
FRONT PAGE
NEWS
MONDAYS thru FRIDAYS
12:45 P.M.
Ku" RA
DIAL 1240
Skinner's Spaghetti ...... 1 P gs. 19c
Skinn Cut 7 -0z.
er Elb Short o Macaroni 1 Pkgs. 19C
Dog Food Delight .................... 12 2a�° 49C
Pillsbury
Apple Turnovers 14- Oz..... Pkg. 49C
Flounder Fillets ' F resh-Lock ... 1b. 65c
Kraft Cheese Sliced American
or Pimento. .12-Ox. 47 /9c
TV
Baby Limas ...... 5 Pk $1 00
Pkgs.
Birdseye Frozen
GREEN PEAS
7 ' Pkgs ' $1 00
•
COMO
TISSUE
Assorted Colors
8 Rolls 49
•
McCORMICK
VANILLA
EXTRACT
2-O
Bottle 47 ¢
Plus... S &H
GREEN STAMPS !
Oleo Good Value I -Lb.
Pure Vegetable Ctns. 1
Morton's
Di o nners Assorted 9
3
r�
Lb, i 0c
/i
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
200 E. 24th Street • 3516 Texas Ave.
Downtown Ridgecrest
Reg.
$1.49
77
Ocean Spray Fresh Cranberries
MONDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1963 THE BRYAN DAILY EAGLE, BRYAN -C.S.. TEXAS FIVt
LITTLE GIRL, BIG PROBLEM
Rita Maria Neria, 3, looked strangely alone when police spotted her taking a stroll
along a downtown street in Dallas, Texas. It didn't take long to find out why —she
was an extremely young "runaway." Her problem? "Momma found a new baby at
home," she tearfully told a friend and poli :eman. Mother and daughter were reunit-
ed later at the Juvenile Bureau and returned home. Rita's young friend is uni-
dentified. (AP Wirephoto).
Pact to Pan Nuclear Tests:
Fitting Kenne Memorial
By LEON DENNEN ed the possibility of an atomic to extend their domination to
Newspaper Enterprise Assn. holocaust. all of eastern Europe and East
NEW YORK— (NEA)— Presi- Will the new President Lyn- Germany.
dent Kennedy's outstanding don Johnson continue President Historians assent that toward
achievement in international Kennedy's foreign policies? the end of his life President
affairs lies after him; it is the Historians still speculate on Roosevelt realized that Russia
nuclear test ban agreement he what the world would have never meant to keep the agree -
recently concluded with Russia. looked like had President Roose- ments reached at Yalta.
Though he never trusted the velt been alive when the last President Lyndon Johnson is
Russians, Kennedy's foreign pol- war ended in 1945. It is a known in a different situation. He is
icy was based on the possibility fact that his successor, the then no newcomer to foreign affairs.
of coexistence with them in one Vice President Harry Truman, He has been Kennedy's close
world. He saw the bitter con- never participated actively in collaborator.
flict between Soviet Premier the conduct of foreign affairs. Nevertheless, there probably
Nikita Khrushchev and Red Thus, when Roosevelt died will be important changes in
China's Mao Tse -tung as an op- there was a vacuum in Ameri- foreign policy under the new
portunity to convince the Rus- can foreign policy. President. Lyndon Johnson is
sians their future and the fu- Truman, in faithfully carry- more conservative than Ken -
ture of the entire world depend- ing out the Yalta Agreement nedy, has less faith in the Rus-
ed on co- operation that exclud- of 1944, enabled the Russians sians.
He is expected to by to re.
k establish friendly relations
with French President De
Gaulle and stsengihen NATO
• e and other western alliances
which were in a sad state of
disinter ration In recent
Sj O' ' . ' �- • months.
Johnson doubtless will pay
By BOB THOMAS, AP Radio & TV Writer less attention to the academic
r * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * '1 advisers who were part of Pres-
By BOB THOMAS joining the ABC comedy that ident Kennedy's entourage and
AP Movie - Television Writer stars Ernest Borgnine: "Theater seek to exploit to the advantage
HOLLYWOOD (R) — Fellow business was disappearing and of the free world the conflict
performers thought it strange so were night clubs, which I between Russia and Red China.
when Carl Ballantine gave up don't like to play anyway be- The United States is the most
acts cause they keep me up too late. powerful country in the West-
one of the most successful ern alliance and the world's
in show business to become tor- There were TV guest shots, but
pedoman 2nd Class Lester Gru- how many times can you play freedom in the foreseeable deal
ber in "McHale's Na Ed Sullivan? ture will depend a great deal
"My biggest pay was from in- on President Johnson's foreign
"I think it's kind of starnge policies.
myself, says the elastic - featur- dustrial shows, but they don't
ed comedian. "I'm losing about come along too often." There is no doubt that for
Russia President Kennedy's
2,000 a week." So he enlisted with McHale
death has raised a hornets' nest.
As the Amazing Mr. Ballan- for better or worse, and he ad-
tine, he operated a hilarious, mitted that it has swung both Nikita Khrushchev, for all his
high - priced act in which his ways• duplicity, wanted to come to
some agreement with the United
card tricks ended as 52- pickup Somebody said there was no
and his disappearing birds be- such thing as small roles; only States. He needs a breathing
ed.
small actors," he crack "I spell in the Red world to mend
came a feathery pulp. his political fences and to come
HE GAVE HIS reasons for think it was Mickey Rooney. to grips with Mao Tse -tung. He
Anyway, it ain't true." exploited his on -again and off-
TROUBLE IS, he said the di- again negotiations with Presi-
rector works not on the star dent Kennedy in an effort to Cooler A i r
system, but the rank system: display his peaceful intentions.
The best stuff goes to the com- Kennedy's death is likely to
mander, Borgnine, captain, Joe unleash the anti- Khrushchev
Mo Deep
Flynn and ensign, Tim Conway. and pro - Chinese forces in
"What chance have I got— Russia. In recent weeks, Mao
a torpedoman second class!" Tse-tung has even appealed
I nto State Ballantine wailed. to Red generals to "eliminate"
Ballantine still does guest Khrushchev.
Sy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS shots as the maladroit magico Until now Khrushchev has
This is the season for one cold and plays Hollywood gatherings been able to outmaneuver his
front after another, and a fresh such as a tax assessors' conven- enemies. The death of Kennedy
one pushed across Texas toward tion. He plans to stay here may give his enemies their long
the southeast Monday, whether he keeps sailing with awaited opportunity to strike
There was another sharp McHale or not. again.
freeze in the Panhandle behind
the front, which had advanced
as far as Texarkana, Waco and
Del Rio before sunrise. The mer-
cury skidded to 21 degrees at
Dalhart.
As the cooler air approached,
light showers traipsed across
much of Central Texas during
the night and early morning.
Somewhat cooler weather was
in prospect for most sections of
the state Monday night. North-
west and North Central Texas
were expected to warm Tues-
day.
New five -day forecasts, cover-
ing the rest of the week, called
for temperatures a few degrees
below normal to a few above
with little or no moisture.
Fireball Seen
At Santone
SAN ANTONIO (R1 — Several
San Antonio residents said they
saw a large fireball with a red -
fish tail in the northwestern
skies Sunday night.
Among those reporting the
spectacle were Henry Howell,
news director of WOAI- radio.
He said the orange and white
light was visible five to six sec-
onds and appeared to burn out
before reaching the horizon.
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THE DAILY EAGLE
Bryan - College, Station, Texas Tuesday, Febr 24, 1970 12 Pages 10 Cents
on Called As witness in Political Race Probe
dress publisher Morris Higley,
and Memphis, Tex., insurance
man A. L. Gailey.
Also, Quanah Chamber of
Commerce president Clark Bur-
kett; Sam Russell, manager of
the West Texas Utilities Co. in
Quanah; and Bill Sayles, a reg-
istered lobbyist for the West
Texas Utilities Co.
Dies was ordered to bring all
records of political contributions
to Rep. W. S. Heatly of Paducah
and State Treasurer Jesse
James "or committees operat-
ing on their behalf in all politi-
President
Welcomes
Pompidou
WASHINGTON (AP) —
French President Georges Pom-
pidou arrived for a state visit
today and was welcomed by
President Nixon as head of the
nation which is "our oldest
friend and oldest ally in Eu-
rope."
Several thousand invited
guests joined Nixon in welcom-
ing the French chief of state in
ceremonies on the White House
lawn, as a helicopter brought
him from an overnight stay at
Camp David, Nixon's mountain
retreat in nearby Maryland.
In two days of talks, Nixon
said, he and Pompidou will
touch on. "the great problems of
the world ... We will work to-
gether for liberty and independ-
ence of all people."
A white tie dinner at the
White House honors Pompidou
Tuesday night, and Nixon will
attend a dinner Wednesday at
the French Embassy in a spe-
cial show of courtesy to a visitor
who faces possible demonstra-
tions against his country's aid to
Arab nations.
At the Capitol, meanwhile,
Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield of Montana said Pom-
pidou will be treated "with the
full courtesy due a visiting head
of state and an old ally" when
he addresses a joint session of
Congress Wednesday.
Specifically, the speakers
complained of the French sale
of jet fighters to Libya while re-
fusing to deliver 50 aircraft al-
ready paid for by Israel.
The possibility of continued
demonstrations, coupled with
his expected snubbing by may-
ors of New York and Chicago
later in his visit and a partial
boycott of his address to a .joint
session of Congress Wednesday
worries U.S. diplomats.
Pompidou was sufficiently
prepared that not everything
will be milk and honey ,uring
his visit. Though the French
head of state is a sophisticated
statesman, some American dip-
lomats expressed concern he
might become offended if the
demonstrations are too noisy.
cal races for the last eight
years," Wheatley said.
Seven men and one woman
testified two weeks ago as the
grand jury began investigating
alleged pressure involving the
race for the Texas House seat
that Rep. Heatly holds.
The grand jury already has
heard testimony from Heatly's
opponents, Democrat Leon Wil-
liams of Quanah, Tex., and Re-
publican Zack Fisher of Mem-
phis, Tex.
Williams told newsmen before
testifying that officials of the
state Agricultural Extension
Service had informed his wife
she must resign as home dem-
onstration agent of Hardeman
County.
Hutchison, when contacted
Monday night, repeated past
statements that it was a matter
of conflict of interest since Mrs.
Williams' husband was running
for state office.
"Our action (in asking her to
resign) was based on long stand-
ing policy," Hutchison said. He
said it was "not the result of
pressure from any source."
Others expected to testify to-
day were Morris Higley, pub-
lisher of the Childress, Tex.,
Index; Clark Burkett, nresident
of the Quanah Chamber of Com-
rnerce; and A.L. "Ace" Gailey,
a Memphis insurance man.
Williams said he was asked to
resign as manager of the Qua -
nah Chamber of Commerce, al-
though chamber officials earlier
had indicated a leave of ab-
sence would be fine.
Fisher indicated he was pres-
sured to drop his business
agreement with loan officers of
Watkins `at S
When Degelia Slain
EDINBURG, Tex. (AP) — A
Houston man said today he was
present at the slaying of Sam
Degelia Jr. in an isolated pump -
house near McAllen in July 1968.
Jerry 0. Watkins, 43, testified
that Charles V. Harrelson, 31,
shot Degelia to death on a prom-
ise of $5,000 that had been of-
fered by Pete Thomas Scamar-
do.
Scamardo, 31, a Hearne busi-
nessman, is on trial as an ac-
complice in the Degelia slaying.
Watkins said Harrelson told
him that Scamardo hoped to col-
lect a $50,000 insurance policy
on Degelia's death.
"He (Harrelson) offered me
part of the money but I re-
fused," Watkins testified. Wat-
kins originally was charged in
the killing, but the charge was
dismissed.
The indictment against Har-
relson alleges he was offered
$2,000 by Scamardo.
Defense lawyer Percy Fore-
man failed Monday in two sepa-
rate motions for a mistrial.
Foreman also has a running ob-
jection to each question Dist.
Atty. Oscar McInnis asks of
Watkins concerning anything
Harrelson did or said.
Watkins was perhaps only a
sentence or two away from the
dramatic high point of the trial
when Dist. Judge J.R. Alamia
ordered a recess until 9:39 a.m.
today.
Watkins testified that he qnd
Harrelson had flown to McAllen
from Houston on July 6, 1968,
because Harrelson said he had
some business to attend to.
The portly witness said Har-
relson insisted upon his signing
for a rent car at the McAllen
airport. McInnis asked Watkins
what the reason was.
"Chuck was under indict-
ment...," Watkins said, but he
never finished the statement. He
was interrupted by Foreman,
who called the answer "highly
prejudicial and inflammatory."
Foreman then made his second
request of the day for a nris-
See HOUSTONIAN, Page 2
the First National Bank of
Memphis.
Gailey, one of those called to
testify this week, is a director
of the bank and has a small
partnership in Fisher's insur-
ance firm.
Security measures were tight-
er today. Witnesses were con-
fined to a witness room and
were under court orders not to
discuss their testimony either
before or after they appeared
before the grand jury.
During the first session, wit-
nesses were allowed to talk to
newsmen while waiting in a hall
outside the grand jury room.
U.S. Atty. Seagal Wheatley
has said no indictment -is being
sought "at this time." He has
declined to elaborate on the in-
vestigation, except to say it is a
"routine" inquiry into alleged
"irregularities" involving un-
named candidates' "efforts to
file in state races."
Others who already have tes-
tified include Charles Ford of
Longview, one of Heady's lolig-
time friends.
A &M Board
OK's Track,
Turf Funds
Directors of the Texas A &M
University system today
allocated $586,000 for in-
stallation of artificial turf and
track surface at Kyle Field and
sold $9.5 million worth of
revenue bonds for utility plant
projects.
After a late start, the board
zipped through most of its
agenda in less than an hour.
The board authorized the
university to proceed with its
"Nuplex" study designed to
help meet the state's future
water needs through nuclear
desalination.
A $300,000 annual budget was
set to support the research
project.
"Nuplex," Texas A &M of-
ficials explained, is a coined
word describing a large com-
plex consisting of a nuclear
p Ow e r reactor, electricity
production, water desalination,
c h _^ m i c a: processing and
production, agriculture and
associated activities.
"Nuplex" is a long - range
study, applicable to the 1985-
2000 period, officials emphasized.
In other business, the board
sold revenue bonds valued at
$9.5 million and awarded four
contracts totaling $4,599,603.
Halsey, Stuart & Co., Inc., of
New York, and associates at an
effective interest rate of 6.9958
per cent.
Funds from the bond sale will
be used to finaiice construction
projects.
The bonds will be paid off
by student utility use fees.
Contracts included a $3,208,125
award to Brown - Antho-
ny - Rowan & Wallace of
Lubbock for its low bid on a
major phase in the expansion
of Texas A &M's central utilities
plant; $704,55 to Wilcon, Inc.,
of Bossier City, La., and
CS Council Sets
Gas Rate Hike
The College Station city
council approved a 17.36 per
cent increase in the general
service rate by Lone Star Gas
Co. to residential and com-
mercial consumers Monday
night.
"I think the scale now present
with a $2 minimum fee is fair
and equitable. It allows the
company a seven -plus per cent
overall growth profit," Ransdell
said.
"We have a much better gas
system than we started with.
The first billing comes out one
day later than Bryan's first
billing," Ransdell said. He
added the new rate becomes
effectivo in 30 days.
Lone Star Gas originally
requested a 21.68 percent in-
crease which was reduced to
17.53 percent and the final 17.36
percent.
"We thought the small in-
dividuals were being penalized.
We computerized the in-
formation and decided on the
present increase," Anderson
said. He added that Bryan and
College Station were about the
last cities in Texas to !rear
appeals for rate increases.
"There is no average user,
but this (rate increase) gives
the small user a much better
position and it does depreciate
with the volume of use,"
Ransdell said.
Mrs. Norma Miller, of the Bi-
City Hobbi -Kraft on 1001 Texas,
said the gas meters had not
See CS COUNCIL, Page 2
$669,642 to the Boswell Co. of
B r y a n, with both firms
providing additions to the
university's sanitary sewer
system.
The board also approved a
$17,281 contract to Alice Roofing
& Sheet Metal Works of Alice
for re- roofing Downs
Natatorium and the university
hospital.
Appropriations included the
$586,000 for the artificial turf
and track surface for Texas
A &M's Kyle Field and adjacent
practic. area.
The board approved a
university recommendation to
See DIRECTOR, Page 2
Contracts On
Sewer Plant
Awarded
Wilcon, Inc., of Bossier City,
La., and the Boswell Co. of
Bryan received contracts today
for improvements and additions
to Texas A &M University's
sewage collection and treatment
system.
Wilcon received the contract
for additional collection lines
and a lift station on a low bid
of $704,555.25. Three other firms
submitted bids. The A &M
engineer's estimate for the
project was $561,500.
Besides allocating the funds
for the Wilcon contract, the
board of directors of the A &M
System allocated $1,000 for
1 See SEWER, Page 2
AP Photo
FRENCH LEADER WELCOMED IN WASHINGTON
Vice President and Mrs. Spiro T. Agnew Greet Pompidou at Airport
Council Approves Rezoning Request
(Continued from Page 1)
been read for the last four
months at her business and at
her home. She added the bills
had been estimated by the gas
company.
"My bill for December was
about $50, for January, about
$45, and for February, about
$40. And February was
unusually hot for this time of
the year," Mrs. Miller said.
Logan Wilson, district
manager for Lone Star Gas,
said some meters were not read
because of bad dogs, cars I in the community.
parked over the meters, or We added both to.vtts
other circumstances. together (the investment) to get
Mrs. Miller said there were the investment. The citizens in
no circumstances which would College Station are better off
have prevented her meters from because they generally have
being read. better homes and investment
"What she is getting at is that I wise they are in better shape,"
if the increase in rates is due Wilson said.
to higher wages, higher costs, He said the Railroad Com-
and the costs of labor going mission reported the College
up, why is the service not Station revenue was $200,000
better," Councilman Joseph and revenue for Bryan was
McGraw said. $629,000.
Wilson said the increase was Holt and McGraw voted
based strictly on the investment against the rate increase.
"I can't with clear conscience
vote for it," Holt said.
The council authorized Mayor
Anderson to negotiate with
AT Jerome (Jack) Zubfk of
CS C S ets Bryan and a representative from
Texas A &M University to
establish a liasion committee
between citizens and utility
companies in an effort to iron
Date Foy Election out complaints. Anderson said
the joint city utility ;;ommittee
would strive to receive and
evaluate major complaints ar,d
By FRANK GRIFFIS said he was still undecided. to make specific recom-
Eagle Staff Writer City Manager Ran Boswell mendations to the council as to
The College Station City gave a clarification of the action that may be taken.
Council set April 7 as the voting places for the precincts. Public , access to this r_om-
election date for the office of He said Dozier was in Place mittee. I think, is vital,"
mayor and three council posts 2, Holt in Place 4, and Ransdell McGraw said.
at their meeting Monday night. in Place 6, and that voting for The council approved a
The council also set March these places would be held in request for rezoning by the
6 as the last date for filing, the new fire station. Dobrovolny family estate of a
March 17 as the first day for Voters from Place 1 would tract east of proposed Anderson
absentee voting, and April 3 as vote in the A &M Consolidated Street and south of Iiolloman
the last day for absentee voting. Music Room, and voters from Drive. The request was for
Councilman James H. Dozier Place 3 would vote in the old commercial zoning of z 1.985
said he probably would run for city hall, he said. acre tract.
J. W. Wood, architect, said
re- election unless something Anderson said Dozier has the Dobrovolny's wanted a
unforeseen came up. He added served one two -year term and neighborhood business district
that he really hadn't given the Holt has served for six years. with possibly small office space,
idea much thought. He added that Ransdell was but - without a large supermarket
"I've given it lots of thought, elected to fill the unexpired to serve a proposed apartment
but I am in no position to say term of Theo Holleman who district.
whether I will run yet," 0. M. died. He added that Ransdell Wood said the Planning and
Holt, mayor pro -tem, said. has served a little more than Zoning Commission turned down
"I'll give you a statement one year of the term. an earlier request for a larger
later," Mayor D. A. (Andy) "As mayor, I am winding up commercial district about of e-
Anderson said. my second term," Anderson half mile west of the 1.985 acre
Councilman C. H. Ra nsdell said. tract. He added that the
Dobrovolny's plan to request an
additional five acres of com -
Weather mercial zoning to further serve
the area.
Holt said he felt the com-
mercial district was too small
adequately serve the ft
El sewhere m ent area and that tr
would possibly be congested.
We will have approximately
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS J Memphis, cloudy ... 51 46 20,000 square feet of lease space
and parking space for ap- areas previousl not within city and on race days at Texas
proximately 60 cars in the 1.985 limits, 500 feet south and west International Speedway.
acre tract," Wood said. of the West By Pass from This isn't New York City,
Dozier said he felt the com- Wellborn Road to the Bryan - 'Bill," McGraw said to Cooley.
mercial tract should be located jurisdiction line. Dozier said he questioned the
in the center of the proposed "Sewage has been a problem, need to require $100,000 in
apartment complex instead of but I am glad to be within the property damage insurance.
south of it. city limits. I look forward to How could a taxi do that
Dozier and Holt said they felt receiving city services such as much damage," Dozier asked.
the other proposed commercial sewage and water," Edsell They could run into our new
area which the Planning and Jones said. Jones said his home firetrucks," Boswell quipped.
Z o n i it g Commission had was taken into the city limits Dozier told the council that
rejected, was a better com- by the passing of the ordinance. the property owners on Orr are
mercial district because it was The council reached an not signing the quit - claims
nearer the highway and the College Station extraterritorial deeds because they are afraid
nuisance factor was less. agreement with the A &M if they do the proposed roads
Wood said two companies had Consolidated School District for (Holleman Drive) will never be
found a need of a neighborhood the erection of a baseball built.
shopping district in the area. practice field facilities for the I The council agreed to send
We Ieep putting on the Little League at South Knoll letters, possibly signed by
b o o k s more commercial Elementary School. The council Mayor Anderson or City At-
property, but nobody seems to agreed to erect and maintain torney Don Dillon, to the
build on it and the land value the practice fields and to property owners on Orr stating
just goes up. Will there be assume the responsibility for if they execute the quitclaim
construction on the land," mowing the grounds during deeds, they will be held in
McGraw asked Wood. times of recreation and coun- escrow and will not be recorded
Wood said yes, there would seling. until the contract is let for the
hopefully be construction. In other business, the council street construction.
We have literally worn this approved an agreement with the I think it is a good idea;
area out. We need to let them Texas Highway Department in the people need to know they
build apartments and a com- connection with the extension of can have faith in us," Ransdell
mercial center or not. I, for FM 60 from State Highway 6 said.
one, am for it," Ransdell said. to the East Loop (University The council agreed to allow
Dozier was the Qs* council Drive extension). A r n o I d Jeske, building
member who rejected the The council changed the renovator, to keep a building
proposal. proposed taxi ordinance to on Marian in the South Park
I don't feel it is the correct enable the council to regulate Section on its present per -
place," Dozier said. all rates of any vehicle covered manent foundation, even though
The council approved an by the ordinance. All rates will it is approximately eight inches
ordinance rezoning a 27.234 acre have to be approved 5y the city too close to the street. Jeske
tract of land east of proposed council. said the building is one of six
Andersoa north of Holleman and The council changed the he bought from the city on
south of Park Place on the license fee for taxis from $15 University Drive.
condition the developer paved to $25 per vehicle. Jeske said the permanent
the extension of Anderson from The council said the ordinance foundation was laid within the
Park Place to Holleman, ac- should restrict the •age of 25 foot distance from the street
cording to the city ordinance vehicles used as taxis. Coun• specified by the city due to a
608. cilman Bill Cooley said he problem in surveying and laying
The council also approved an thought competition would take out the property Imes.
ordinance rezoning a 2.98 acre care of the age of the vehicles. I can't believe four inches
tract south of Holleman and Bill, you have a faith in would constitute an erosion of
west of proposed extension of competition I don't have," our law," McGraw said.
Welsh in the Crawford Burnett McGraw said, emitting a low Jeske said he was , �o closer
League owned by Alphonse whistle. to the street than some other
Holik oA the condition that ire For the protection of the buildings in South Park which
dedicates Nevada and provides citizens we ought to know what existed before the street or-
for the extension and con - the rote is. We can accept the dinance was passed.
struction of Welsh according to rates, but I think they aught Jeske said if the Dermanent
ordinance 608. to be posted (inside the taxi)," foundation was not used, the
Cound members anpruved an Anderson said. building would run into
3 r d i a a c e amnding thel We're not really issuing a problems of stabiliza *.ion with
plumbing code to allow mobile franchise, but a permit to the use of pads.
home elks to install plastic operate. I think competition will In other business, the council
pipes for water lines outside of keep the rates down," Cooley agreed to retain the name of
mobile banes. said. Krenek -Tap Road on a street;
The council also approved an Councilman Dan Davis said in the newly annexed area
ordinance annexing all of a thought the rates would go up which was dedicated to the
certain territory, including all during football game weekends public in 1940.
Be Ready Friday
By Dave Mayes
Battalion 'Editor
College Station city officials
may finally move into their new
city hall Friday —two months be-
hind schedule provided the build-
ing's case of "chicken pox" can
be cured in time.
Contractor W. H. Barsh of
Waco told the City Council Mon-
day night that the pox -like fun-
gus that has spotted the plastic
acoustical ceilings in some parts
of the building should be remov-
ed by the end of the week, weath-
er permitting.
Barsh and architect C. R. Wat-
son of Bryan appeared at a coun-
cil session called to determine
causes for delays in the comple-
tion of the $340,000 city hall and
fire station, located across State
Highway 6 from Texas A &M.
The two - building complex was
originally scheduled to be finish-
ed Nov. 24.
Councilman James H. Dozier
stated the council's position this
way: "We feel like we've been
left in the dark."
Councilman 0. M. Holt com-
plained that he did not know
about any reasons for the con-
struction delays until the middle
of December, when Watson sent
a letter to the city attorney ex-
plaining some of them.
Mayor D. A. "Andy" Anderson
added that there have been "days
and days when nothing has been
done."
"I finally had to go in (to the
city hall) at weekly intervals to
find any progress you could see,"
he said.
Barsh said that there had been
no construction delays due to
negligence on the part of his com-
pany.
He placed most of the blame
for delay on Brazos Concrete
Products of Waco, a subcontrac-
tor responsible for casting the
components of the pre - stressed
concrete sections used to build
both structures. Barsh said the
firm was 35 days late in deliv-
ering the sections for the city
hall and 55 days late, for the
fire station.
He added that work was de-
layed some 20 days because of
rain.
Watson defended Barsh, saying
that the man "has done every-
thing he can" to get the job fin-
ished as soon as possible.
He said that he had tried to
keep the city manager informed
of possible delays as soon as
Barsh notified him that they were
likely to occur.
Watson said he had just re-
ceived last week a letter from
Barsh asking for a 55 -day delay
because of the ppnels. He added
that delays of this nature at
least in terms of number of days,
were hard for Barsh to anticipate
in advance.
As late as September, he said,
he expected the city, hall to be
completed before Christmas.
Councilman Joe McGraw said
that one reason the council be-
came upset and called this spe-
cial meeting was because Barsh's
requests for payment "came in
like clockwork, as if there was
no delay at all."
"I think the council is going
to have to take some here," Do-
zier said, "and invoke this pen-
alty clause" to get some mone-
tary settlement with the contrac-
tor for the delay.
A payment to the city voiced
by some councilmen was $5,500.
City Attorney Don Dillon said
that the architect must deter-
mine which delays are unjustified
and how many days they entail.
These days, Barsh, Watson and
most councilmen agreed, should
be determined in a joint meeting
between Watson and the council.
Once' the number of days of un-
justifiable delay are determined,
if any, the council will decide
what action it will take.
Anderson said he would call a
meeting as soon as Watson had
prepared a recommendation for
the council.
Texas A &M's administration
Monday approved recommenda-
tions of the athletic council that
Athletic Director Gene Stallings
be allowed to schedule an 11th
fdotball game on Sept. 12, 1970.
Stallings said he was negotiat-
ing for a home game on that date
and hopes to make final arrange-
ments in the near future.
A &M's athletic council, com-
posed of five faculty members and
headed by Dr. 0. D. Butler; voted
in favor of the 11 -game proposi-
tion in a meeting Sunday in Dal-
las.
A &M's athletic council favored
the proposition because:
1 —The new academic calendar
calls for classes to begin Aug. 31
and there would be no problem of
having the first game before stu-
dents arrive on campus.
2 —The additional game would
lead to only three more days of
practice at the beginning of the
season. With a Sept. 12 game,
the players would start practice
on Aug. 19. With a Sept -- *game,
the players would start practice
on Aug. 22.
3 —There would be no addition -
altime away from campus in 1970
with a home game. The time away
from campus would be very slight
with a road game since the team
ordinarily departs on Friday af-
ternoon prior to a Saturday game.
4 —An 11th game would provide
A &M with an additional home
game, at least every other year,
thus providing additional enter-
Ross Volunteers to March
In New Orleans Saturday
Texas A &M's Ross Volunteers
assemble in honor guard forma-
tion Saturday for the highlight
parade of the week -long Mardi
Gras celebration in New Orleans.
Commander Marvin J. Hoelting
of Nazareth will lead the 100 -
cadet elite honor military unit
in a position directly in front of
King Rex's float in the colorful
parade.
The 83- year -old unit consists
of three platoons, the staff and
color guard.
The Rex honor guard appear-
ance will be the second of the
year for A &M's oldest military
organization. The white -clad Vol-
unteers, who traditionally form
the honor guard for inauguration
of the Texas governor, flanked
Apollo 11 astronauts Neal Arm-
strong, Edwin Aldrin and Mike
Collins in a Houston parade last
August.
At New Orleans, the company
will quarter aboard the U.S.S.
Intrepid, aircraft carrier to be
berthed in the port of New Or-
leans. A social hosted by the New
Orleans A &M Club also is planned
for the senior and junior cadets.
The cadets will leave A &M
Saturday and return Feb. 11, ac-
cording to Army Maj. Jarrell
Gibbs, co- advisor with Air Force
Maj. Ray Copus. Frank K. Nico-
las, staff assistant in the Com-
mandant's Office, also will accom-
pany the unit.
The RVs also annually partici-
pate in San Antonio's "Battle of
Flowers," Aggie Muster, Silver
Taps and provide honor guards
for visiting dignitaries.
For Football
11 -Game Season Approved
By Administration Officials
FIGHTING THE ELEMENTS
Aggies scurried around the campus Monday, bundled up to keep out the cold, biting wind.
Temperatures dropped yesterday, were expected to drop more Monday night. (Photos
by David Middlebrooke)
Cold, [Find Engulf State
By The Associated Press
Saw - toother winds kept Texans
shivering over a broad expanse
of the state this morning.
Fortunately for residents of
the Panhandle - Plains sector and
far West Texas, where it was
coldest, the icy breezes of the
day before subsided.
The Weather Bureau reported
up to 4 inches of snow blanketed
u o Around 1'7)ne Sp.4 — R d
northeast of Van Horn, both in
the mountains of far West Texas,
but the fall abated sooner than
expected. As much as 5 inches
more had been predicted.
Official observers said enough
snow fell during the night and
early today to lay a light cover-
let down the west side of the
Texas Panhandle also. There was
no word of any travel difficulty,
however.
Temperatures near dawn ran
as low as 12 degrees at Marfa,
13 at Plainview, 14 at Lubbock
and 15 at Perryton.
Freezing weather enveloped
all of the state exeept the Loxes
Rio Grande, where Brownsville
registered 40 dogr , nt
hour.
Clearing skies helped the mer-
cury drop throughout the state,
and the bitter w i n d s shifted
southward with an arctic front
which thrust into the Panhandle
Monday. It was fair every-
where this morning except for a
few clouds in the Northern Pan-
handle.
Except for a little warming
across the Panhandle and North-
west Texas, little change was
forecast.
Readings at other points this
morning included Amarillo and
Wichita Falls 18, San Angelo 19,
Dalhart 24, Denison, Sherman
and Texarkana 21, Killeen 22,
Abilene 23, Dallas and Tyler 24,
Childress, Fort Worth, Longview,
Midland and Mineral Wells 25,
Austin, Big Spring, College Sta-
tion and Lufkin 26, Beaumont,
Cotulla and Port Arthur 28, Del
Rio, Houston and San Antonio
29, El Paso and Wink 30, Vic-
toria 31 and Palacios 32.
tainment for students, faculty and
fans.
5 —The additional revenue from
an 11th game would provide great
assistance to the total athletic
program.
6 — The participating players
strongly favor an additional game
because they would be engaged
in an intrasquad scrimmage on
the Sept. 12 date if there was no
game.
Licht Killed
In Monday
Auto Mishap
Area Businesses Comment
On Proposed CS Ordinance
Representatives from Lone Star
Gas Co. and General Telephone
Co. of the Southwest submitted
comments Monday night concern-
ing the new College Station subdi-
vision ordinance for consideration
to the College Station Planning
and Zoning Commission.
Pervy Stone, of the Lone Star
right -of -way department, told the
commission he did not know how
the company would be able to
show the working pressure of
all pipelines carrying inflamable
liquid or gas as is called for in
a section of the new subdivision
ordinance.
"I don't know how we'll be able
to furnish this information be-
cause the pressures can change
frequently," Stone said.
"I know the pressures change
and usually the only time one
runs into real high pressure lines
is when the pipe was laid before
the city was built," Codie Wells,
commission chairman, said.
He said the section was added
to the ordinance so that prospec-
tive buyers will know what they
are buying so they can be warned
of the lines.
Stone told the council a con-
servative estimate for a high
pressure line would be 100 pounds
plus.
Stone said he was submitting
the comments for consideration
and that Lone Star Gas was not
opposed to the ordinance.
Tommy James, from the Bryan
office of General Telephone, ask-
ed if the company must secure
a permit from the city before it
begins any construction.
"It does not mean you neces-
sarily have to have a permit,"
Wells said. He said that the city
likes to have the utilities laid
before the streets are put in to
prevent the cutting of streets.
In other business, the council
denied a request for rezoning by
V. H. Litchford of a tract of land
approximately 100 feet wide and
700 feet long extending from
State Highway 6 east along the
south city limits of College Sta-
tion.
Rudder Improving in Hospital
A &M President Earl Rudder,
who has been in a Houston hos-
pital since Friday, was reported
in improved condition Tuesday.
Rudder is undergoing treatment
at Methodist Hospital for spasm
of the arteries due to high blood
pressure, university sources re-
ported.
He was transferred from a
Bryan hospital to Houston after
becoming ill Thursday.
WEATHER
Wednesday — Partly cloudy.
Wind East 10 to 15 m.p.h. High
43, low 22.
Thursday— Cloudy. Wind South
5 to 10 m.p.h. High 48, low 37.
Arthur W. Licht of El Paso,
sophomore architecture major,
was killed Monday morning when
his car hit a bridge and plunged
into a deep ditch on State High-
way 21 west of Bryan.
A Department of Public Safety
spokesman said the accident oc-
curred about 1 a.m. but was not
discovered until about six hours
later.
Licht, who was thrown from
the vehicle, was traveling alone,
the DPS spokesman said. The
accident occurred eight miles west
of of Bryan.
He was believed to have been
returning to school from San
Antonio, where his mother, Mrs.
Richard H. Licht, is a graduate
student at Our Lady of the Lake
College.
The 21- year -old student resided
at 2104 Cavitt in Bryan.
University National Bank
"On the side of Texas A &M."
—Adv.
Committee members are, in ad-
dition to Dr. Butler, head of the
animal science dept.: Dr. Charles
H. Samson, head of civil engi-
neering dept.; Walter S. Manning,
professor in accounting dept.; Dr.
Lannes H. Hope, in counseling
and testing dept.; and Harry L.
Kidd, assistant to the dean in the
Graduate College.
FOULED
Pat Kavanagh goes up for two during Saturday's A &M-
Southern Methodist University game, and is fouled by the
Mustangs' Gene Phillips, who was fouled out of the game
on the play. Steve Niles (52) looks on. See story page 5.
(Photo by Mike Wright)
NEW NAME, NEW LOOK
Assistant Chief Morris Maddox of the A &M University Police gets into one of the de-
partments new -style cars to begin a tour arojmd the campus. The organization was
formerly called Campus Security. See story, page 3. (Photo by David Middlebrooke)
THE BATTALION
Page 2 College Station, Texas Tuesday, February 3, 1970
Campus Briefs
Dr. Howes Elected
To Pfeiffe Board
Dr. J. R. Howes of the Poultry
Science Department has been
elected to the five - member board
of directors of the Pfeiffer Foun-
dation of New York and Phila-
delphia.
He also has been appointed
chief scientific adviser to the or-
ganization, which receives income
for promoting research on envi-
ronmental improvement.
Weaver Wins First
For Second Time
Dave Weaver of Hamlin, grad-
uate student at Texas A &M, pre-
sented the first place research pa-
per for the second year in a row
during the recent annual South-
ern Weed Sciences Society meet-
ing in Atlanta, Ga.
Weaver is working toward his
doctoral degree in the Depart-
ment of Soil and Crop Sciences.
His paper, which won him $50,
was selected over about 20 other
entries from major universities in
the United States.
Bicycle Buff Here
To Speak Wednesday
One of the nation's best known
bicycling promoters, Keith King -
bay of Illinois, will lecture here
Wednesday.
Kingbay will discuss purposes
of the League of American
Wheelmen, Inc., of Chicago, of
which he is cycling activities
chairman. His talk is scheduled
for 11 a.m. in the Recreation and
Parks Department building.
Robert E. Couch of the Recrea-
tion and Parks Department said
the speaker has been involved in
all phases of bicycling since his
early teens. He was a bicycle rac-
er and has managed five Ameri-
can bike teams in international
competition.
Couch said Kingbay pedals
6,000 to 7,000 miles per year.
Casting Continues
For March Play
Casting continues tonight for
the Aggie Players mid -March
production of "Under the Syc-
amore Tree."
Director Bob Wenck said the
second night of tryouts will be
at 7:30 p.m. in Guion Hall. Parts
for six men and six women are
open to all interested students,
graduate or undergraduate.
Rehearsals of Samuel Spew -
ack's play to be presented March
11 -13 and 19 -21 will begin imme-
diately, Wenck said.
The play, set in an ant hill,
takes a satirical look at humans
from the alien viewpoint of the
ant.
History Prof Authors
Journal Article
An A &M history instructor is
author of the lead story in the
January issue of Southwestern
Historical Quarterly.
Irvin M. May Jr., who is com-
pleting Ph.D. requirements at
the University of Oklahoma,
wrote the article entitled "Peter
Molyneaux and the New Deal."
History Department head Dr.
J. M. Nance notes May's article,
"will be of great interest to
many persons in Texas who
knew Peter Molyneaux of Dallas,
one of the outstanding, but by no
means blind, c r i t i c s of the
Frankllh D. Roosevelt Adminis-
tration."
165 Former Students
To Convene Here
Approximately 165 l e a d e r s
from the Association of Former
Students will meet here this
weekend for annual conferences
and workshops.
Among those attending will be
the board of directors, class
agents, councilmen, club officers
and past presidents, reports as-
sociation executive director Rich-
ard (Buck) Weirus.
More than 100 wives are ex-
pected to accompany their Ag-
gie husbands. The Ramada Inn
is headquarters and site for all
meetings.
The board meets Saturday
morning and the Winter Council
Meeting is scheduled Sunday
morning.
Saturday afternoon will mark
the first time concurrent agen-
das for class agents, councilmen
and club officers have been sched-
uled.
Sbisa to Offer
Hamburger Line
There will be a hamburger line
in 3bibu for tho evening meal
Mondays through Thursdays, ac-
CADET SLOUCH
cording to Pat Wertheim, chair-
man of the menu board.
It will be served in the an-
nex and will be similar to the
sandwich line at noon, he said.
Students will use their vali-
dated identification cards in the
line, he said. This provides an
alternative to the hot evening
meal.
ID Cards Validation
Schedule Announced
The schedule for validating
identification cards of board stu-
dents who dine at Sbisa has been
announced by Fred Dollar, direc-
tor of food service.
The cards will be validated in
the Main Hall of Sbisa from
10:15 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. until
Wednesday, he said.
Dollar said that students would
not be permitted to dine without
validated identification c a r d s.
The schedule for students dining
in r:)_ __ _ will be ". nounc¢d lok
er.
c:be Battalion
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of
the student writers only. The Battalion is a non -tax-
supported, non - profit, self educational enter-
prise edited and operated by students as a university and
community newspaper.
LETTERS POLICY
Letters to the editor should be typed, double - spaced,
and must be no more than 300 words in length. They
must be signed, although the writer's name will be with-
held by arrangement with the editor. Address corre-
spondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217,
Services Building, College Station, Texas 778 43.
1969 TPA Award Winner
Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim ir
Lindsey, chairman; H. F. Eilers, College of Liberal Arts;
F. S. White, College of Engineering; Dr. Asa B. Childers, Ja.
College of Veterinary Medicine; and Dr. Z. L. Carpenter,
College of Agriculture.
The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A &M is
published in College Station, Texas daily except Saturday,
Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods. September through
May, and once a week during summer school.
Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising
Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San
Francisco.
MEMBER.
The Associated Press, Texas Press Association
The Associated Collegiate Press
Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school
year; $6.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 4
sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address:
The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station.
Texas 77843.
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for
republication of all new dispatches credited to it or not
otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous
origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other
matter herein are also reserved.
Second -Class postage paid at College Station, Texas.
EDITOR ............. .................... ........... DAVE MAYES
Managing Editor ........
................ David Middlebrooke
Sports Editor . ...............................
Richard Campbell
Assistant Sports Editor ....-- .. ................ Mike Wright
Staff Writers ........
Tom Curl, Janie Wallace, Jay F.
The Norelco 84 is the modern efficient
Goode, Pam Troboy, Steve For-
way to handle daily correspondence. Its
man, Gary Mayfield, Payne -
sirrlplicity of operation assures perfect
Harrison, Raul Pineda, Hayden
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Whitsett, Clifford Broyles, Pat
the' Norelco 84's low price and marry
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features like the exclusive magnetic tape
Robinson
Columnists ............
Monty Stanley, Bob Peek, John
ically. Find out how the Norelco 84 can
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Photographers ................
Steve Bryant, Bob Stump
Sports Photographer ............................ Mike Wright
Career opportunities for
college graduates with the
WAXTI nations leading employees
are available through our
%amrsck
office. Visit us Monday EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
i.: thru Friday.
• College Division •
FOR JOB North Gate
OPPORTUNITIES 331 University Dr.
846 -3737
* "EMPLOYERS PAY FOR OUR SERVICES." A division of ERC
FREE FOOD
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BOOTCAMP -1-4
EVERY Wednesday — 12:00 Noon
FOR ALL AGGIES
Rides Back To Classes
BAPTIST STUDENT CENTER
by Jim Earle
New Laundry Schedule
Announced by Hartsock
A new laundry schedule for the
spring semester has been an-
nounced by G e o r g e Hartsock,
laundry manager.
The laundry is open Monday
through Friday and students
should leave their laundry by 9
a.m. and pick it up after 3 p.m.
the next day.
Students whose last names be-
gin with A through C must leave
their laundry on Wednesday, D-
H, on Thursday; I -M, on Friday;
Mc -R, on Monday; and S -Z, on
Tuesday.
Richards to Head
Highway Committee
Hoy A. Richards, head of the
transport operations department
of the Texas Transportation In-
stitute, has been appointed chair-
man of the highway - railroad
wade crossing- eommittee of the
Highway Research Board- Nation-
al Academy of Science.
The committee will conduct a
crossing safety conference at
Georgia Tech in August.
Every minute and
a half... someone
calls AAMCO
Every week AAMCO satisfies more
than 10,000 transmission problems.
You get free towing, a free road.
check, fast, efficient service —most
times in just one day. And with
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You ran trust your
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TRANSMISSIONS
World's Largasi Transmission specialists
JOEL W. MOOR, JR.
1215 Texas Ave.
822 -0109 Bryan
PEANUTS
I
1 L-
Bulletin Board
WEDNESDAY
Host and Fashion Committee
will have a 20 to 30- minute
meeting at 5 p.m. in the MSC
Lounge.
Aggie Wives Bridge Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. in Rooms 2C
and 2D, MSC. For information,
call Judy Humphries, 846 -8033.
Freshman Council will meet at
8 p.m. in the Library Conference
Room.
'68 Grad Awarded
Commendation Medal
Army 2nd Lt. Edward Vezey,
'68, of Friendswood, has been dec-
orated in Vietnam for valor in
combat action.
He received the Commendation
Medal with "V" device for brav-
ing hazardous conditions to call
in artillery fire on hostile em-
placements, according to the ci-
tation.
Forward observer of a 27th
Infantry company which had come
under intense enemy mortar fire,
Lieutenant Vezey on several oc-
casions during the Oct. 13 en-
gagement exposed himself to ene-
my fire as he continued to adjust
artillery fire.
The lieutenant is the grandson
of Dr. and Mrs. E. E. Vezey, 600
Guernsey, College Station.
PICTURE SCHEDULE
1970 AGGIELAND
Make up pictures for Grads
& Seniors thru Feb'. 14.
New Freshmen pictures
Taken thru February 14.
Pictures taken from 8 a, m.
to 5 p. m.
BRING FEE SLIPS
UNIVERSITY STUDIO
115 North Main North Gate
846 -8019
Read Classifieds Daily
REGISTRATION AND TEXT BOOKS BREAK YOU?
Then see us, for a personal loan. Take advantage
of our prompty, confidential loan service now.
UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY
317 Patricia (North Gate)
College Station, Texas
Telephone: 846 -8319
GOLF CLUB SNACK BAR
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Call today for a demonstration.
OTIS McDONALD'S
429 S. Main — Phone 822 -1328
Bryan, Texas
TEXAS INTERCOLLEGIATE STUDENTS ASSOCIATION
Invites yoU to join 1tS programs w.M...
ACAPULC
SPRING BREAK March 20 -26
From
$139
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Flights depart and return/San Antonio or Dallas
(San Antonio flight now guaranteed)
$279
CHARTER FLIGHTS
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FROM TEXAS
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TISA "s Authorized Travel Agent
BEVERLEY BRALEY ... TOURS .. TRAVEL
Memorial Student Center
Texas A &M University
College Station
713 -846 -3773
By Charles M- &halz
THESE ARE NICE 5HOES, BUT I
MISS MY SANDALS....., 5ry /F!
FrIllM
"What a schedule —no Monday morning classes, no Friday
classes, and no afternoon classes! Then I noticed that th'
computer had me scheduled for only one course!"
News
Briefs
Scalznardo Trial
EDINBURG, Tex. (AP) — Exhaus.
tive questioning of prospective jurors
for the trial of a prominent Central Tex-
as businessman charged with hiring the
murder of his former business partner
continued in 92nd District Court Court
today.
Seven jurors have been selected in
six days of questioning.
Peter Thomas Scamardo, 32, of
Hearne, is accused of paying Charles
V. Harrelson of Houston $2,000 to kill
Sam Degelia Jr., also of Hearne.
Dist. Judge J. R. Alamia has ordered
an additional venire of 250 persons to
report to the Hidalgo County Court-
house Wednesday.
Bertrand .Russel
PENRHYDEUDRAETH, Wales (AP)
— Britain today mourned philosopher
Bertrand Russell, one of the great minds
of the 20th century and one of its most
controversial figures.
Lord Russell died Monday night at
his home in North Wales. He was 97.
A spokesman said Russell's fourth
wife, Edith, was with him when he
collapsed. He reportedly had been suf-
fering from influenza.
The Times of London said "Bertrand
Russell's claim to be remembered by
history rests securely on his work in
mathematics and symbolic logic and
in philosophy on which his infuence was
pervasive and profound."
Inte "ration
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Little progress toward the school de-
segregation ordered by the Supreme
Court developed Monday in much of
th„ Southern area affected.
Schools in five Florida counties clos-
ed while teachers were being transfer -
red to effect faculty integration.
Two schools in Alabama were closed
by bomb threats, but no explosives were
found.
In Louisiana, four districts opened
on schedule trying to meet the integra-
tion deadline. In one, Winn Parish, white
mothers cruised the streets of Winn-
field urging white parents to keep their
children out of the newly integrated
schools.
In Mississippi, two school districts —
Indianola and Tunica —had turned all
black, with white pupils and teachers
flocking to private schools.
Black Panthers
NEW YORK (AP) — Jeering and
heaping abuse and obscenities on the
judge and prosecutor, 16 Black Pan-
thers forced two .recesses of a hearing
on pre -trial motions as their bomb -
conspiracy case got under way.
About 350 sympathizers, many of
them white, marched in rain outside the
Foley Square courthouse, chanting
"Power to the People" and other slo-
gans.
State Supreme Court Justice John
M. Murtagh recessed the hearing as de-
fendants demanded that the press section:
be turned into a seating section for their
relatives.
A second start was interrupted by
scuffling between defendants and a
guard. Several of the Panthers shouted
"Heil Hitler!" at Murtagh and court of-
ficers.
Gallup Poll
NEW YORK (AP) — Billionaire H.
Ross Perot says he is sponsoring a Gal-
lup poll in hopes of proving to the North
Vietnamese how deeply concerned U.S.
citizens are about treatment of Ameri-
can prisoners of war.
"It is the first public opinion poll,
to my knowledge, ever done for the
North Vietnamese," Perot said Mon-
day.
Perot said the North Vietnamese are
fascinated by polls, but he said they
don't understand why Americans are
concerned about the 1,400 American
prisoners of war.
The poll will be made public, he
said, after it is shown to the North Viet-
namese.
Perot also said he will announce a
nationwide letter - writing campaign in
"three or four weeks" to show Amari-
can feelings to the North Vietnamese.
Fair
Braun- College Station Area Forecast:
Fah through Wednesday. Cold tonight with an-
other hard freeze. Warmer Wednesday.
Wednesday: Sunrise, 7:15 a.m.; sunset, 6:04 p.m.
Temperatures: To noon today, low 25 degrees at 6
a.m.; High, 41 at 11:50. High Monday, 51: low, 32.
Rainfall: For the past 25 hours ending today, 0.00:
total this week, 0.00; total this month, 0.00: total this
yezr. 2.27.
Wind velocity: From the NE at 11 miles per hour.
Relative humidity: 32 per cent.
Barometric pressure: 30.08 and falling.
Ann Landers .............. 7
I Bridge .................... 9
Comics 9
Deaths .................... 2
N Editorials .................. 6
Heloise .................... 7
Horoscope ................. 9
D Sports ..................... 4
Stock Quotations .......... 2
E T- :evision ................. 9
Want Ads .............. 10 -11
X Weather Elsewhere ...... 10
Women's News ............ 7
Vol. 94 — No. 174 Since 1876 Bryan - College, Station, Texas Tuesday, Feburary 3, 19 32 Pages in Three Sections 10 Cez'
C
H
Co I *
et
S et
Fire Destroys home of
The Rev. C. A. Taylor of the Brushy Community looks over a bi-
cycle Monday afternoon as his home burns to the ground. Mr. Tay-
lor said he had gone to get some wood because "it looked like a
cold night," and returned to find his small frame house in flames.
Five of his nine children were home; the others were in school.
The bike was one of the family's few possessions not totally destroyed
' Al coh ol a a s High
I L ocal
PAT LITTLE
Eagle Staff Writer
Of all the drug abuses in
Bryan alcohol ranks highest,
according to Dr. David Pope.
Dr. Pope, John . Godfrey,
county probation officer; Dr.
John Holbrook, psychiatrist;
Police Officer Bill Thornal, and
Dr. O.C. Cooper made up a
panel to discuss drug abuses
last night for the fourth Bryan
City Council P -TA program.
A film entitled "Drugs and
the Nervous System" was
shown at the beginning of the
program and later one on LSD
was shown. They showed how
Earl Rudder
Hospitalized
At Houston
Texas A &M president Earl
Rudder, who has been in a
Houston hospital since Friday,
was reported in improved
condition Tuesday.
Rudder is undergoing treat-
ment at Methodist Hospital for
spasm of the arteries due to
high blood pressure, university
sources reported.
He was transferred from a
Bryan hospital to Houston after
becoming ill Thursday.
Two File in L ast Felt/ H ou rs
THEE DAILY EAGLE
the various drgus act on the
brain, reasoning and the body.
Dr. Pope said he feels alcohol
ranks highest because parents
use it. He claimed the children
see alcohol consumed as an
integral part of society. The
other panelists agreed this is
one reason why the use of
marijuana is become social.
Of the drugs, heroin is the
most expensive, and am.
phetamines and barbiturates
are the easiest to get, he said.
Dr. Pope said they are easiest
to get because mothers use them
to lose weight and the child can
steal them from her purse.
"They know how to boil it down
and shoot it in their veins," Dr.
Pope said.
Officer Thornal said mari-
juana costs about $1 for a
"stick" or "joint ".
He said the price starts out
at about $1 or $2 for 35 ounces
from the farmer. By the time
it reaches the pusher the same
35 ounces costs $25 an ounce
or $875, he said.
Various reasons given as to
why children use drugs were
cited. Dr. Holbrook said the
majority of the cases he has
dealth with had emotional
problems before they used
drugs.
"It's the most complicated
Brushy Family of 1.1
in the blaze, which also claimed the family mar Clothing and house-
hold items are being collected for the family by the Bryan City
Mission. Cash donations may be sent to the Charles Taylor Fund
at University National Bank in College Station. (Eagle Photo by
Mac Shadix)
problem I've ever seen," Dr.
Cooper said.
The panelists said there are
various methods a parent may
use to check whether his child
is using drugs. One is to watch
for a sudden change of friends
or routine.
If the child starts associating
with a new crowd instead of
his old buddies this could be a
good indication. Also, if the child
starts going places other than
where he used to — "T o a
dance instead of the basketball
game, for instance" this is
another indication.
The panel advised parents to
go to some authority if they
find out the child is using drugs.
This could be a minister a
school principal, the police, or
a doctor. The panel said it would
(See ALCOHOL, Page 2)
other than those concerring
delays because of rain.
Barsh told the council one of
the reasons for the delay vas
that he had trouble with 'wo
subcontractors. He added that
the floor covering subcontractor
had run out of material ind
he had to do the job himself.
"We obtained 60 per cent of
the material from Houston, but
the rest had to come from
Chicago. It took 14 days to get
t o College Station from
Chicago," Barsh said.
"But the real delay we suf-
fered on the job was with the
delivery of the pre -cast com-
ponents such as the concrete
beams and columns," Barsh
told the council.
"Until they were delivered
there was nothing we could do,
we had nothing to work with.
The contractor was aware of
our schedule needs; we had
written the dates for delivery
on the purchase order," Barsh
said.
Barsh told the council the
supplier was 35 days late with
the delivery for city hall and
55 days late with the fire station.
"One thin¢ this council is
upset about, speaking for
myself, is that I consider myself
as part owner of the building.
And ever since July we have
asked how much behind the
construction was and we got no
specific answer," James H.
Dozier, councilman, said.
"I feel left out in the dark,"
Dozier said.
"I feel it was not my place
to talk to you. My relationship
to you is through the architect,
and I feel he is who should
be working with you," Barsh
said.
He added that the architect
was aware of the problems he
encountered.
McGraw asked Barsh if he
had forwarded any verbal ',r
written progress reports. Barsh
said he had filed requests to
give notice of the delay.
"Isn't it a general practice
for the owner to be advised on
these matters ?" Mayor D. A.
(Andy) Anderson asked.
"No sir, your agent is the
architect. That is the way we
operate and always have,"
Barsh said.
"The architect may as well
have lived in Austin. He could
have extended the contract until
next December or December
(See CONTRACTOR, Page 2)
'
Texans Lineup S up er
AUSTIN (AP) Texas Dem- the two parties.
ocrats and Republicans finish- There will be seven family
ed their lineups Monday for the battles in the Democratic pri-
May 2 super - primary but it will mary, if the Smith -Hall race
take a few days to determine develops, and two in the Re-
if Gov. Preston Smith's challen- publican primary.
ger can play. Baum told Hall he was forced
State Democratic Chairman to refuse his application for a
Elmer Baum refused C accept place on the ballot because the
candidacy violated a provision
Sen. Ralph Hall's $1,000 filing
fee for governor, and the Rock- of the state Constitution. The
legislator immediate) a provision says a legislator
wall le
� y p' whose term has not expired
pealed to the Texas Supreme cannot hold a state office whose
Court. pay was increased during the
The court agreed to hear ar- lawmaker's tenure.
guments, setting the intra -party Hall's term nins until Janu-
debate for Wednesday morning. ary 1973, and the recent legis-
Otherwise, there were few lature raised the governor's sal -
surprises on the last day of of- ary from $40,000 to $55,00J a
ficial filing for public office in year.
Local Rings Draw Hats
Before Final Gong Sounds
The candidates are all in now
and the races for Brazos County
offices have shaped up.
As of 6 P.M. Monday anyone
interested in holding a public
office lost his chance for this
election. The Democratic
primary is May 2.
Two more persons filed in the
last few hours Monday. Cecil
C. Capps, 4001 Woody Lane,
Bryan, will run against George
Dunn, the incumbent, for county
commissioner in Precinct 2. He
will also face Walter Wilcox and
Marion E. Jones.
Fred Wehrman threw in his
hat against Joe Daniel Novosad
GREAT SAVINGS PLANS made
even better by new legal rates
at FIRST BANK & TRUST. Adv
for justice of the peace in
justice precinct 5.
In another contested county
commissioner's race, incumbent
W. A. (Bill) Stasny has been
challenged by Bryan City
Commissioner Harmon (Son)
Bell in precinct 4.
Judge Jess B. McGee of
justice precinct 4, Place 2 has
also filed for re- nomination. He
has no opponent.
Justices of the peace in other
precincts have not filed
probably because the county
commissioners have notified
them their pay may be cut off
beginning January 1971.
Others who have filed for re-
nomination by the Democrats,
all incumbents, are Judge W.
C. Davis of the 85th District
Court, District Clerk W. D.
Burley, County Judge William
R. Vance, County Clerk Frank
Boriskie, County School Supt.
W . D. Bunting, County
Treasurer Bill Elkins, State
Rep. Bill Presnal and State
Board of Education member
Charles Hart.
U. S. Congressman Olin E.
Teague has filed also.
Glynn (Buddy) Williams has
filed for renomination as
Democratic county chairman
and Robert L. Edgecomb has
filed for county chairman in the
Republican primary.
BRYAN BUILDING AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION —Your SAVINGS
Center since 1919. Adv
Barsh Names
Date for Council
By FRANK GRIFFIS
Eagle Staff Writer
Construction on the new
College Station city hall and
police -fire station is expected to
be complete by Friday, B. H.
Barsh, president of Barsh
Construction Co., Waco, told the
College Station City Council last
night during a special session.
The council called the session
with Barsh and architect C. R.
Watson of Watson & Associates
of Bryan to find the cause of
delay in construction of the new
building.
"We set Friday, Feb. 6, as
the day of completion. We have
notified all our subcontractors
and are working toward that
date," Barsh said.
The council agreed to wait
until the project was completed
and to let Watson reconsider
how many days extension
should be granted.
"I am willing to make a
reconciliation of the requests for
delays and to then summarize
the whole thing up to see how
much should be granted,"
Barsh said.
Extension of time has
nothing to do with completion
of the deadline, I don't believe,
.because I think Mr. Barsh
would have finished that
building six months ago if he
could have," Watson said.
"There is nothing in the
contract that says that Rick
(Watson) has to pass on the
requests right now. He has
gotten his requests in to notify
all parties concerned in this
case being the architect," city
attorney Tom Geisenschlag
said.
"Mr. Watson will have to see
hovs many t3ays arE justifible
delays," Geisenschlag said.
"That is why the architect
was hired. That's why we are
paying Mr. Watson his fee, we
are buying his judgment,"
said Councilman Joe McGraw.
"The whole ball of wax rides
with Rick (Watson). Mr. Barsh
has satisfied the waiver
required by giving notice of the
d e l a y within 15 days,"
Giesenschlag said.
"The key is deciding what is
to be considered a delay that
Mr. Barsh has no control over.
If Rick Watson says the delay
was not in Mr. Barsh's control,
then it is not our problem,"
Giesenschlag said.
Watson told the council be
had not granted any requests
Sen. Charles Herring, Austin,
acting as attorney for the State
Democratic Executive Commit-
tee, told the Supreme Court
Monday Baum "had no choice
but to deny" Hall's application
for a place on the ballot.
"At one time or another, this
question has to be decided," he
said.
Herring's law partner, Fred
Werkenthin, said the constitu-
tional provision is clear.
"The citizens of this state ex-
pect (a sena ±or) to serve that
four -year term, at least to the
extent of no running for any
office he has participated in
creating or raising the salary,"
Werkenthin said.
John Hill, Houston attorney
Ra Tal lis
Negotiators for management and the unions
shakes hands as they begin new talks in Washing-
ton in an effort to settle the disnutc which still
threatens a nationwide rail shutdown. John P.
Hiltz, center, is chief spokesman for the rail-
who was defeated by Smith in
the 1968 primary, argued for
Hall that the constitution pro-
vision should not be so narrow-
ly interpreted.
"As apparently interpreted by
the respondent, the body poli-
tic will be denied its right to
vote for persons of its choice
(and) persons seeking high po-
litical office will be caused to
cast votes against such propor-
tional increases in emoluments
for fear of being denied access
to the political office they seek.
Instead of said provision being
a shield to the public against
wrongful connivance and ef-
forts to seek financial gain, it
would be used as a sword to
(See STATE, Page 2) ,
roads At right is William W. Winpismger, of the
AFL -CI10 International Association of Machinists,
the union representative. Completing the trio is
Asst. Secretary of Labor W. J. Usery. (AP Wire -
photo)
P Gas Firms
I
ji y Ord i nance
Representatives, from Lone must secure a permit before it I city should participate in
Star Gas Co. and the Bryan begins any construction. i development," Fitch said.
offide of General Telphone Co. "It does not mean you Wells said the city has a'
of the Southwest submitted necessarily have to have a special fund which is used only
comments concerning t he permit," Wells said. He pointed for the purchase of park land.
proposed new subdivision or- out the city likes to have the He added that developers can
dinance to the College Station utilities laid before the streets pay cash instead of donating
Planning and Zoning Corn- are put in to provent the cutting land for parks. Wells said the
mission, streets. (fund is not used for develop -
Pervy Stone, of the Lone Star "We should like to eliminate ment of the parks.
right -of -way department told as much cutting of streets asl "This means the city must
the commissioners he did not we can. This means there will develop the parks," Wells said.
know how the company would be a city inspector out there' We are hoping this policy will
be able to show working inspecting the work to see if be passed on as an ordinance,''
pressure of pipelines carrying utilities are going in at the he added.
inflamable liquid or gas as correct depth," Wells said. Fitch asked the council if the
specified in a section of the James asked the council if new subdivision ordinance in-
proposal. each utility company was eludes any provision designating
"I don't know how we will be assigned a space in the 20 -foot where the parks wail be located.
able' to furnish this information easements. Wells said the Brazos Area
because the pressures can "If each and every company Plan has a comprehensive plan
change frequently," Stone said. was assigned a definite location for this. n
"I know the pressures change it would be easier from our own "We recommended in the last Principal Ill
and usually the only time one point of view," James said. of the Brazos Area Plan which
He -She Ruling
Job Series
Begun At
Kemp High
Dr. Robert C. White, local
dentist, emphasized the need fot
properly prepared personnel at
the first of a careers program
series at Kemp High School
Monday night.
Also participating on the
program were anesthetist E.L.
MCllwain, dental hygientist
Mrs. Sherry Goff, dental
technician F. C. Fotz, medical
librarians Mrs. Sandi Askew
and Mrs. Barbara Pritchard,
pharmacist Virgil Schlueter,
Mrs. Norma C. Schmidt, health
education; Mrs. Phyllis Allen,
R.N.; Mrs. Barbara Wright,
L.V.N., and radiologist Ernest
A. Elmendorf, M.D.
runs into real high pressure "I feel the telephone company will show the new locations of April Ashley, 34- year -old model who was a merchant seaman
lines is when the pipe was laid would be interested in going some of the parks," Wells said. before undergoing sex change surgery, arrives at a London
before the city was built," Co- in a common trench with In other business, the corn- divorce court Monday before the high court judge ruled her
die Wells, acting commissionj another power company. But missioners voted to change the marriage to Arthur Cameron Corbett, 56, son of a peer, WRS
chairman, said. there would be some locationsl prop g surgery sed ordinance to read "in annulled. The judge, Sir Roger Omrnd, made British legal
He said the s was added where we could not use a heavy industrial and com- history b ruling that
mercial areas, electricity lines g y cannot change a person's sex.
to the ordinance so prospec- common trench," James said. y d
L
f
cable hoto via cae rom L
tive property buyers will know Bill Fitch, a developer, told may be run underground." (AP W _
what they are buying and can be the commissioners he did not Wells pointed out his does not An Eag R eview
warned of the lines. see how feasible it was to put. include neighborhood business
Logan Wilson, district man- a park in each piece of areas.
ager. for the gas company, development. He asked if the In other business, the coni-
told the commissioners they run city would pay for im_ enners denied a request for Guitari T op s,
from one pound to 65 -pound gas 1? r o v e m e n t s within the r rezozoning by V. H. Litchford of
lines in College Station. minimum park areas called for a tract of land approximately)
"How are we to abide by the in the proposed ordinance. 10 feet wide and 70 feet long
section of the ordinance which "I may mention that if the extending from State Highway
deals with the high pressure area is platted as a park by 6 east along the south city By THYRA PLASS
lines ?" Stone asked the council. the developer, the city should limits of College Sation. Eagle Music Critic
Stone told the commissioners be responsible for im- "On the corner, I plan to put' If anyone doubted the appeal
a conservative estimate for a provements that abut or go a service station; down 100-feet Of flamenco guitar the doubt
high pressure line would be 100 through the park at the time would go a U- Tot -Em store; and was easily dispelled last night
pounds -plus. of development," Fitch said. on the far end would be a as the renowaed Spanish
"Do you think we would be This amount of land is simply display house for lakeside guitarist, Sabicas, played to a
protecting the public if we for areas that accommodate cottages," Litchford told the standing room only audience in
spelled out 100 pounds plus as people within neighborhood council. the ballroom of the Memorial
high pressure lines ?" Welisl distance; they are called neigh- Student Center at Texas A &M.
asked. borhood parks," Wells said. Wells said the district In fact, man people were
Stone said he felt a line "Having donated the land for engineer of the Texas Highway y p
should be staked across a tract) the park, is it feasible to ouild Department had told him the turned away at the door.
East Bypass would probably not Sabicas, long known as "the
on a preliminary plat warrin both sides of the street and be kin of flamenco ", la
p rY P g be complete until 1972. Wells g played a
p y
of the gas line. able to use just one?" Fitch pointed out the only traffic program devoted wholly to his
Wells asked Stone if the felt asked. Litchford would receive when own compositions or im-
the size of the line determined "For those types of parks it the bypass was complete wcu,d provising as it may have been.
how dangerous the line was. is not good to have a street be northbound because of the Most of these pieces were
Stone said some pipeline through because it is traffic island proposed for State based on the folk songs and
materials were stronger than dangerous; they are play Highway 6. dances of his native Andalusia.
others; therefore, the size the parks," Wells said. ''I think from the commercial Only a couple of numbers were
pipe did not necessarily conn trol Fitch said he thought the city devoted to Latin American
the safety angle. should pay for half of the street point of view it would be ni
Stone said he was submitting if is their policy at the time as a residential area," Com- rhythms or themes. It was
the comments for consideration the plat is approved. missioner R. R. Rhodes said. really the background of An-
and Lone Star was not opposed , The council told Litchford the dalusia and of his Spa nish
to the ordinance. All the council can do is to property could be of com • a
set the policy and pass on each mercial value if it was tied in Alcohol S all
"We just want clarity because one " Wells said. with a subdivision.
we will have to live under it," on. "if the city designates an "There is no way I could A Stone said. area as a park and the land build a house on the ro ert ®f 7t Mb e�� Tom James from the '
�' � owners develop on both sides it is too small, but it is just �
Bryan office of Generall the point ia, on developmont of right for buaincoo," Litohfoi Q
Telephone, asked if the company land adjacent to the park, thesaid.
Student Press Said
Dominated by SDS
Eighty -five per cent of the revolutionary," Barnett em
student press is controlled by l phasized.
left -wing militants of the "I don't believe in the
Students for a Democratic generation gap," the New York
Society and it represents a C i t y executive remarked.
serious threat to America, "There has always been a
warned the president of the generation gap, always a
National Strategy Information struggle between fathers and
Center here Monday. sons.
Frank R. Barnett, a former "However, in the long run,
university professor, explained the father's values were ac-
three areas the SDS has vet cepted. Today, we don't have
long -range plans to control, and a generation gap, we have a
all have been successful. value gap."
Barnett spoke to 48 businessmen
enrolled in the three -week Barnett outlined the different
E x e c u t i v e Development militant groups in America and
Program at Texas A &M explained the organization and
University. goals of each.
He noted there are 270 un- He reported the 50,000 tiard-
dergound newspapers reaching core revolutionary students are
one million students, including a small minority of the 6.7
400,000 high school students. The million college studetns, but the
underground press includes' militant's control over the press
everything from advertisements
lhas been one of their most
on sex relations attacks successful and most dangerous
against American business and
values. accomplishments.
Eighty of the nation's college Barnett reasons these college
newspapers are in the hands of editors and reporters will move
the SDS Barnett pointed out. from the college campus to
A major student organization, daily newspapers, television
the N a t i o n a l Student networks and magazine staffs
Association, "has always been in an effort to control the
liberal but now has become nation's mass media.
radical," Barnett declared. Less successful, but just as
"NSA has virtually been cap-
tured by SDS."
Barnett stressed both NSA
and the underground press, S t oc
through its nation -wide
Liberated Press News Service —
the Associated Press of the
radicals —now control much of
the news service copy going into Quotations are approximately
student newspapers. those of noon today, York
"The best propaganda then time. Over-the-counter stocks
becomes available to member
papers almost instantly, are bid prices and do not include
Barnett suggested. commission.
"American society is caught American General Life .... 22
Gateway Fund .
between the hammer and the ........ 8.41
L
anvil," he told the business- General Security Life ...... 3 7
men. Holiday Inns .............. 37
He said on one side is the Hospital Affiliates ......... 17
Interco, Inc. 25
Soviet industrial- military com- % Lone plex and on the other side are Marcortai• Gas Co. ........ 5�4
militants whose goals are to /s
establish communism in their Reading & Bates ......... 23
homeland. Redman Industries ........ 24% /s
Barnett said there are three
types of protesters—pragmatic SCM Corporation ......... 19
protesters who want to reform Southwestern Life ......... 29
the student cafeteria, cultural Southland Life ...... ...... 37
protesters who want out of a Furnished by A. G. Edwards &
cultural system and Son, Inc.
revolutionary protesters, whose MORNING STOCKS
numbers at the present time By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
are numerically small but with AT &T ... ..... 48 off 1 /4
much influence. Ail Rich ......71 up 3/
rotations
Coca Cola
80
Cont Oil
..23
Dow Chem
..67
duPont .....
97
El Paso NG...
..18
Ford .........37
GAF ..
.. __ .15
Gen Elec
......72%
Gen Foods
....78
Gen Mtrs
.......64
Gen Tel
.... ..28
Gen Tire
.......18%
Great A &P
.. ..25
Gulf Oil ...
__ ..26
IBM ..
.... 340
Kennecott
.... 45
Mobil Oil ...
.... 393'8
Monsanto
..31
Penn Cent
.. .. 27N
Penney
... ....46
RCA ........
30
Safeway
..... 23
Sears ..
......64
Stand Ind
.......39
Stand NJ
.. . ..55
Texaco ..
....25
Beth Stl ...... 26 /2 Transitron 6
"We should welcome the Cat Trac ...37 1 /8up % I Un Carbide
pragmatic protester and not Celanese ..... 50 up % Uniroyal ..... 16
drive him into becoming a hard Cities Svc .__ ...37 up %I Woolwth .. .. 33
dangerous, is the militant's
move into business and in-
dustry, Barnett maintains.
"These kids who have been
protesting against polite deans
and administrations found the
AFL -CIO was not an Anglo-
Saxon racket club," Barnett
( quipped.
Another area the militants
have set their sights on is
pollution.
"Everybody is concerned with
pollution and the SDS has held
workshps on how to become the
spearhead of the antipollution
crusade," Barnett reported.
The militants plan to burn oil
company credit cards as part
of a nation - wide anti - pollution
demonstration in April, he said.
"All left -wing groups are now
involved in pollution. They feel
it will gain them respectability
among the middle class," Bar-
nett added.
It's time for the American
people to take action, he con-
cluded.
"There is no reason why the
American Middle class cannot
organize for politics and public
affairs." Barnett concluded.
up s�
up '
off 1 /a
off 1 /4
Off 1 /4
Off a/
off %
off 1
off %
Off 1 /4
of 2
i
u
off %
O ff 1/8
O ff 1/S
1 /4
u
1
off 3 /
off 1 /8
up %
up
off
off 1 /8
up %
vi Drugs
F or City H all Co let �ton
(Continued from Page 1) l (Continued from Page 1) seem to be any shortage of
be wrong to ignore the problem
as is often done. two years from now,' O. M. correspondence between the
Holt mayor pro -tem, said. contractor and architect except
If parents find out a child's "Why is there no one on the in the last request in December.
friend is using drugs they should construction site from one week "Isn't Jan. 30 an odd time
contact authorities and if they to the next ?" Dozier asked. to request an extension on 55
don't want to tell the other Barsh said he pays people to days for the po iels that hap -
parent directly they should do be there every day and progress pened in July," Dozier asked.
it through a third person, the reports had been submitted for "No, we gave notice of it
panel said. The panelists also every day. before. Perhaps we could have
advised parents it would be "I know he's right (referring been ardvous with our requests,
wrong to tell their child he could to Dozier) because I can go but we don't normally work in
not associate with the drug user there for days and days and this manner," Barsh said.
any more. there is no one there," Holt He added that the requests
said. are submitted near the end of
Early education about drugs Barsh said he had received the job.
for the child is the best reports from the workers every Barsh told the council that he
weapon against drug abuse day. He added that the workers had not made an attempt a
according to the panelists. might have been at another part complete the city hall prior ro
Education, and Welfare, and of the building at the time the completion of the fire station.
obtained through the Texas visits were made. "If we had known this was
Medical Association, the "Other than the inconvenience desired we would have done the
Medical Auxiliary, a doctor, the and disappointment you suf- job that way," Brsh said.
Parent's League n Houston, fered in anticipating in getting Dozier said completion of the
U.S. Departmetn of Health, into the building, were you city hall was most important
Education, ado Welfare, and ,Sure hurt. Barsh asked. t the council.
"Sure we are; we need the
Texas Alcohol and Narcotics I building," Holt said. "There is a financial value
Education. Barsh added he felt the for the building each day that
Dr. Pope said some drug I original 220 calendar days it exists. We have a per -day
users have sustained serious specified in the contract was cost just like there is a per -day
adequate time for the project,
value for you," C.H. Ransdell,
councilman, said.
McGraw asked Ran Boswell,
city manager, if he had con-
veyed the desire or wishers of
the council in wanting the
building as soon as possible io
the architect.
"I talked to him about the
delay, but tie gave no ex-
planation," Boswell said.
"Is the architect doing the job
of conveying delays to the
council and conveying the genera
feelings of the council to the
contractor," McGraw asked.
"The lack of knowledge lies
with the architect, not the
contractor," Holt said. He
added that the council did not
know about the provision in the
(AIA) General Conditions are
and architect follow which allow
the extension of time.
The contract provides that the
American Institute of Architects
(AIA) Genral Condiations are
a part of the contract
documents.
brain damage and been in b a r r i n g unforeseen cir- S hospitals for years and they are cumstances. Politics fai Speed
still there. "I think if the person "We feel like the rain was
who wants to use drugs could in excess of normal and the s�
see what these patients are like, Itwo weeks of cold weather was Dur f ina l F ifinor Hours mere vegetables, they would not in excess of the norm," Barsh
use drugs." said. He a dded that he usually
can't work more than 20 in one (Continued From Page 1)
+ month. deny access to the public forum
Repistratinn At Watson told the council that to persons indisputably quali-
� Barsh had requested 22 days fied to seek such office," Hill
delay because of rain. said.
Allen Today o r Holt calculated the project as Just minutes before the 6 p.m.
being 59 days past deadline. i filing deadline, Byron Fullerton
Night have that you were University '
j
�' \l�ht �li��S�C delayed 22 days because of rain, y of Texas Law School
Night registration for evening that leaves 37 days attributable associate dean, signed up as a
Republican challenger to Lt.
classes at Allen Academy to delay in delivery of the
Junior College division will be concrete panels. Were you Gov. Ben Barnes, who has no
Democratic opponents.
at 7 p.m. today and Wednesday. delayed that long ?" Holt asked.
Classes will begin Monday Barsh said he had written in In addition to the possible
and will meet one night a week. June alerting of the delay with Smith -Hall race, the Dem
They will be for college credit. the panels. is primary will be enliveneed d y
b by
"We couldn't get the plasterer a hot campaign between Sen
Classes that will be taught are Ralph Yarborough, D -Tex., and
on the job; we terminated his
r h e t o r i c and composition, Lloyd Bentsen Jr., Houston m i l -
E n g l i s h Iecture, are ap- contract and took over the job. Bonaire challenger.
preciation, oil painting, The floor coverer was broke,"
Barsh said. The Republican primary will
and local government, public "It's not my fault he went have a U.S. Senate race be-
3peaking, United States history, broke (floor coverer). Maybe it tween Rep. George Bush, R-
p r i n c i p a l s of sociology, i partly because I hired him, Tex., Houston, and Robert iVior-
courtship, marriage and the i but it was beyond my control," ris, president of the University
family general psychology and !Barsh Barsh said. of Plano. There will be a GOP
computer pregramming. Barsh said that before tie goes. governor's race between Paul
on a job he always checks on Eggers, defeated by Smith in
Zubi k to Talk the money situation with the 1968, and Roger Martin, a politi-
owner, cai newcomer from Gainesville.
To Action Group "But you're saying we didn't Democrats will have five oth
Mayor Jerome (Jack) Zubikl check on the contractor in Waco er contests in their primary,
3f Bryan will speak at 7:30 p.m. i which �� we should have done, an unusual number even for
today at they Twin City Action right, Holt said. Democrats.
Association meeting in the First "The requests for payment Headlining the intra -party
Presbyterian Church in Bryan. 1 came in on time, but the council fight for so- called state cabinet
His topic will the inter didn't know about the ex- offices will be the challenge of
relationship of the people with I tensions until last week. The Rep. Bob Armstrong, Austin, to
their city government in conn- responsibility lies with our veteran Land Commissioner
action with a number of l agent. We realize it is not your Jerry Sadler of Palestine. Also
!ontemporatry concerns the city I fault," McGraw said. in the primary contest will be
is dealing with. He added that there does not Fred Williams, Houston. The
Jerry Guyden and Lynda
Green, Kemp students, con-
ducted the question and answer
session. Willie Moore and
Mrs. Thelma CoVan were co-
�
chairmen of the program.
THE DAILY EAGLE
Page 2 Bryan - College Station, Texas Tuesday, Feb. 3, 1970
I)EATHS and FUNERALS
1�Ir. Licht 175 are scheduled at 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday in the Phillips and
Funeral services for Arthurl Luckey Funeral Chapel in
W. Licht, 21, are pending at Caldwell.
the Harding -Orr and McDaniel
Funeral Home in El Paso.
Licht, a second year ar.
chitecture student at Texas
A &M University, died Monday
from injuries sustained in an
auto accident.
Licht was born Jan. 5, 1949,
in El Paso. He resided at 1022
Foster in College Station.
Survivors include his mother,
Mrs. Helen W. Licht of San
Antonio; three sisters, Mrs.
Judy Sullenberger of Las
Cruces, N.M.; Mrs. Barbara
Shepherd of Bucaramanga,
Colombia, South America, and
Miss Frankie Licht of El Paso.
Local arrangements were
handled by Hillier Funeral
Home.
Mrs. Storey l
CALDWELL — Funeral ser
vices for Mrs. Charlotte Storey, i
Selections Fragmented
gypsy parentage which colored is called flamenco because the
all the music of the evening. music was made by people
There were the traditional affecting gypsy manners or by
ornamental flourishes, the many people who wore brightly
scales and runs, repeated notes colored "flamingo" garments.
sometimes to obsession, the This folk music is still in the
modality (more gypsy than process of being created today.
Moorish). In fact, last night was an ex-
Flamenco divides into two cellent example of this process
types: grande and chico. of formation.
Grande deals with tragedy, There are many superlatives
despair, and sorrow. In many to be noted in the playing of
ways it is similar to the fados, S a b i c a s . His phenomenal
the sad and dramatic songs so technique is ever clean and
effectively sung by Portugese concise; his range of dynamics
women. Lisbon night spots is tremendous; his tones range
specialize in it. from velvety and lush to the
Chico, on the other hand is other extreme of hard and
music of joy, high spirited and brittle as in a harpsichord or
used for dancing and festivals. even a drum; always he plays
This is the form of flamenco with style and flourish and with
which we know best. emotional fervor.
Whether tragic or gay, What we do question is the
flamenco is always emotional, quality and form of his com -
always music of the heart. Itlpositions. One melodic idea orl
figuration quickly leads to
another, another, and another.
There doesn't seem to be any
particular plan or form, only
a long series of fragments.
A whole evening of this leaves
one feeling that he has arrived
no place in particular. If this
sort of music were accented by
singing or the clicking heels and
castanets of flamenco dancing
it could be most effective.
Mrs. Storey died Monday.
Burial is scheduled in the Mart
Cemetery in Mart with the Rev.
Fred Carter officiating.
Mrs. Storey was born Feb.
28, 1894, in Milano and was a
along time resident of Caldwell.
She is survived by four sons,
T.W. Brannan of Fort Worth;
Thomas W. Brannan of Corpus
Christi; Bruce A. Storey of Fort
Worth and Roy W. Storey of
Houston; six daughters, Mrs.
Wade Cross of Houston, Mrs.
J.D. Faubion and Mrs. Mitt
Cantella, both of Bryan, Mrs.
Edmund Slovacek of Caldwell,
Mrs. Clifton Breland of Mart
and Mill Helen Storey of
Houston; one brother, Earl
Kendricks of Houston; 20
grandchildren and 26 great -
grandchildren.
and hear the reaction of the
audience. By the number of
students present, one could have
almost assumed that this might
be known as the "guitar
generation ". It once was piano.
There are so many kinds of
quarter playing to listen to: the
country and western, rock, jazz,
flamenco, and classic. If
flamenco is the popular music
of Spain then our versions of
However, the guise in which popular guitar will have to set
we heard it last night was about their sights much higher to even
as satisfactory as a symphony begin to compare with it in
beauty, imagination, and ef-
strung together out of the fectiveness.
background music from a
movie. Something should hold Apparently the audience last
the parts together and relate night thought so when they gave
one to the other. An artist a record of four standing
trained in both classic and ovations. Standing this much
flamenco could more ably do brings music into the league of
this. football. It apparently is our
It was heart warming to see way of saying Ole, Ole!
Contractor Names Date
winning Democrat meets Harry
J. Trippet, Waco, only GOP
candidate.
Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin
drew a Democratic opponent on
the last day for filing, Dist.
Judge David H. Brown of Sher-
man. The winner meets Edward
Yturri, Corpus Christi, GOP
candidate.
Railroad Commissioner Ben
Ramsey, San Augustine, has a
Democratic battle with Connie
Lawson, Taylor. There is no
GOP candidate for the post.
Three prominent attorneys
and jurists are battling for the
Democratic nomination for the
Texas Supreme Court, Place 3,
with no GOP candidate. The
Democratic candidates are
Hawthorne, Phillips, Austin, for-
mer assistant attorney general;
Civil Appeals Judge Matt Da-
vis, Texarkana, and Civil Ap-
peabls� k dge James G. Denton,
Banquet Todaz
The document states, "the
architect shall grant such ex-
tensions of time as may be
reasonable in the event of labor
disputes, fire, unusual delays in
transportation, unavoidable
casualties, or any causes
beyond the contractor's control,
or by any cause which the ar-
chitect determines may justify
the delay."
"We have been talking to the
wrong man, then," Holt said.
"I let Ran Boswell know we
were three weeks behind in July
and that we thought we could
make it up. My contention is -
that the man has done.
everything he can," Watson :-
said. :.
I am not being derogatory,
but Dec. 11 was the first
correspondencereceived:
from ,you. I for one, knew about
the delays for the first time
then," Holt told Watson.
"Well it seems to me we
should take the damages from
the contractor for the 55 days
delay and he can be reimbursed
by the cement contractor iii
Waco," Dozier said.
"There is no question about
it, the interior of the building :
will be ready to move into
by...wait a minute the material
in the plastic accoustical ceiling -
has developed a fungus on it.
The man from U.S. Gypsum said
he would be here this week to
fix it," Barsh said.
J. M. (Mike) Barron, Jr.
Stocks, bonds, funds, commodities
Walston & Co.,lnc.
1605 First City Nat'l. Bank Bldg.
Houston (713) 2246351
HERE
In Navasota Y TO CALL FOR THE BEST
BUY ON YOUR INSURANCE
NAVASOTA — The Navasota DICK MONDAY
Chamber of Commerce annual 3202 So. College Ave
banquet is scheduled for 7 p.m. Call 822 -3491
tonight in the elementary school!
cafetroium. - P 621010
Dolph Briscoe J.R. of Uvalde S T A T E F A R M
will be guest spaeaker. Tickets : � I In:<,.. Companies
are $3. I LEZJ dome offices: 8loomio¢toq, winow
7�
THE DAILY EAGLE
Vol. 95 —No. 74 Since 1876 Bryan - College Station, Texas Tuesday, September 29, 1970 10 Pages 10 Cents
E mer 9 n c Ordiiia OK d i CS
By JANE HOWELL
Eagle Staff Writer
The College Station City
Council adopted four ordinances
last night which give the mayor
and city manager sweeping
powers during emergencies.
Mayor D.A. (Andy) Anderson
said the . ordinances would
provide an amount of safety to
the city.
' t
!'News
1 1 Briefs
I�
Student Missing
HOUSTON (AP) — Police looked to.
day for a University of Texas freshman,
missing since he caught a ride from
Austin to Houston Friday evening. Jef-
frey Alan Koenen, 18, and his room-
mate, John Lopez, 18, hitchhiked to
Houston with a man whom Lopez said
was driving a 1965 white Ford Galaxy.
Lopez told police he was let out near
his home and Koenen was supposed to
be taken closer to his home. Koenen
hasn't been seen since. Lopez described
the driver as a six - footer, about 21.
Yugoslav- Nasser
BELGRADE (AP) — President Tito
delegated his top adviser today to attend
the funeral of Gamal Abdel Nasser and
continued preparations for President
Nixon's visit to this Communist country
Wednesday and Thursday. Edvard Kar-
delj, a member of the Council of the
Federation, was named to be the presi-
dent's representative at the funeral in
Cairo. Yugoslavia began an official day
of mourning for the Egyptian president,
who died in Cairo Monday.
N - Heart:
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — The semi-
official Cairo newspaper Al Abram said
today that the heart attack that killed
President Gamal Abdel Nasser was not
his first. He suffered a_ serious heart
attack last September and spent six
weeks in bed, the newspaper said, but
"for certain important reasons it was
then decided to say that President Nas-
ser was suffering from an acute case
of influenza."
Campus Unrest
WASHINGTON (AP) — President
Nixon has urged college administrators
to outline to students J. Edgar Hoov-
er's views on avoiding campus trouble.
Nixon sent administrators a letter in
which the FBI director listed eight tac-
tics employed by campus extremists to
lure students into their activities.
Fair
Bryan-College Station Area Forecast: Fair through
Wednesday. warmer afternoons. Cool again tonight.
Wednesday: Sunrise 7:18 a m. Sunset 7:12 P. m.
Temperature: To noon today, low 56 degrees
at 6:00 a. m.; high 72 degrees at 11:30 a. m.
High Monday, 75; low, 56.
Rainfall: For the past 24 hours ending today,
0.00; total this week, trace; total this month, 8.18;
total this seer, 14.78.
Wind velocity: From the E at 9 miles per hour.
Relative humidity: 45 per cent.
Barometric pressure: 29.97 and rising.
Bridge .................... 10
I , Comics ..: .................. 4
Crossword 6
Deaths .................... 2
N Editorial ................... 6
F amily .................... 3
D Horoscope .................. 10
Spot ....................... 10
E Sports ............ .....�..�. 5
Stocks 2
Television .................. 10
X Want Ads ................. 7 -9
4 Weather Elsewhere ........ 2
JPs Put
By KATE THOMAS
Eagle Staff Writer
In a surprise move Monday,
Brazos County Commissioners
Court approved a request by the
three most active justices of the
peace for salaries instead of
payment by fee.
Currently JPs get an ex-
officio salary and $4 a case for
each case tried. Commissioners
approved a salary of $8,400 in
lieu of all fees.
The action came during the
public hearing on the county
budget for 1971 and becomes
effective in January.
Commissioners approved the
proposed $1,166,877 budget, also
including a secretary for the
district attorney's office. Her
salary was budgeted at $3,300.
The first ordinance provided
for interlocal assistance of law
enforcement officials. Under the
ordinance, Bryan policemen
could be used in College Station
and vice versa. The city
manager would authorize the
exchange.
Anderson told the group the
officers used in College Station
would be under that city's
jurisdiction and on its payroll.
City, Schools
Get Surprise
Tax Rieventie
Councilmen also passed a
public disturbance ordinance.
The ordinance defines the
procedures to put down public
disturbances, authorizes the
mayor to exercise broad
powers, provides for notice of
o r d e r s, specifies offenses,
provides penalties and provides
a savings clause.
The ordinance is used in
Dallas and was studied by the
By DAVE MAYES
Eagle City Editor
Bryan city and school official;
reached into their pockets
Monday and found a :itti :� more
change than they expecto.1.
When the Board of
Equalization certified the city
and school tax rolls, it became
official: Both governmental
units had about $4 million more
in total assessed valuation than
estimated in the 1970 -71 budget
Instead of an estimated `tot
million in assessed va:uatton,
the city has $943 million.; in-
stead of $105.5 million, the
schools have $109.2 million.
That means that based on
current tax rates and assuming
a 95 per cent collection rate,
the city should realize $6 1,8M
in tax revenue, and not $596,505
as estimated; the school.;,
$2,064,849 im revenue, rather
than an estimated $1,994,477.
City Manager Fred C. Sandin
told the Eagle today that the
more than $25,000 increase in
revenue will not be quite the
"bonanza' it seems.
Only about $10,000 will go into
the city's ,<evenue fund, wi'h the
r e s t g(omg toward debt
retirement), he said.
Of tt„� i $70,000 revenue in-
crease fore the sc :mots, about
$29,000 w4 be user to retire
the debt, noted school Supt.
Alton 0. Bowen
The schoc ! board will dee!de
what to do with the rest of the
money, he said, adding that he
(See CITY, Page 2)
mayor, city attorneys, and the
city safety committee.
Under the ordinance, the
mayor has the power to order
a curfew, to close any place
where arms, ammunition of
dynamite are sold, and to close
bars, lounges, liquor stores,
gasoline stations, theaters, and
ballrooms.
The mayor also may prohibit
sale of beer and wine or
Fitch Withdraws
From CS Lawsuit
Developer W. D. Fitch has
withdrawn from the suit in
which a group of College Station
residents is seeking to stop the
pay of six A &M employes who
are also council members.
Judge Herman Jones of the
53rd District Court in Austin is
scheduled to begin hearing
testimony in the case at 9 a.m.
Wednesday.
The plaintiffs have based
their suit on a state con-
stitutional provision forbidding
anyone from holding more than
one office of "emolument."
Fitch told The Eagle he had
made his decisions after several
conversations and reflections.
He said the turmoil resulting
from the suit was not in the
interest of the city.
He had earlier filed a motion
asking for dismissal of the suit
in Travis County, but failed and
was "dismissed" from the suit
himself.
Fitch explained he had in-
tended no perronal animosity in
the suit although lie has
disagreed with some of the
things done by the council.
He said he feels the council
on Salar
Dist. Atty. Brooks Cofer Jr.
expressed his appreciation to
the commissioners and said that
for the sake of better law en-
forcement, the office, and not
n e c e s s a r'i ly he, needed
assistance.
Justices of the Peace B. H.
Dewey Jr., Jess McGee and A.
P. Boyett Jr. made the plea
for the salary rather than fee
system.
Dewey cited figures since 1968
and said he was making less
money each year. Costs and
fines which the justices bring
in go into the salary fund from
which all county employes
(See COUNTY, Page 2)
FIRST BANK & TRUST —NUM-
BER ONE FOR A REASON.
has done less than it could or
should do to supplement and aid
the growth of the university
rather than too much, and he
had thought the suit might
improve the situation.
Fitch explained he now thinks
the suit has developed into a
situation which is inhibiting the
city's progress.
He said he has convieed
other parties to the suit that
while what they are concendinfl
may be the law, College Station
has had university- associated
persons on the council for years
and precedent means
something, Fitch said.
Chief plaintiff in the suit is
A. P. Boyett Sr. He has said
on the witness stand he believes
the city would be better served
by persons who are not
associated with Texas A &M. He
is joined in the suit by 22 other
College Station residents. Joe
Ferreri, another plaintiff, with-
drew shortly after the suit was
filed in June.
Boyett served from 1951 to
1967 on the city council and
Fitch from 1949 to 1952.
The City of College Station
won a declaratory judgment in
a class- action suit here last
week, and also has been allowed
to intervene in the Austin suit.
Judge W. C. (Bill) Davis of
the 85th District Court here
ruled that the constitutional
provision does not mean that
A &M personnel may not serve
on the city council and continue
drawing pay from the state.
Faculty, staff and other Texas
A &M employes are not "of-
ficers, agents or appointees" of
the state, the judge held.
He also made the judgment
b i n ding on all future
generations and declared the
provision unconstitutional under
the First and Fourteenth
Amendments of the U. S.
Constitution should it be found
the provision does apply to
A &M personnel.
The class - action suit was filed
here after Bovett and his group
disputed the city's intervention
in the Austin case.
The city contend.; its interests
are at stake since a majority
of the potential city council
members are A &M employes
and would be affected by the
decision,
Iqu 10WPHNIN � i �
flammable liquids such as
gasoline. He may declare a list
of contraband and may exclude
sightseers from the area.
The mayor also would have
the power to order the detention
of persons who impede the
preservation or restoration of
order or incite others to do so.
He would not need to consult
with the city council before
exercising his authority under
the ordinance.
Also adopted, over the ob-
jections of two councilmen, was
an ordinance which prohibits
disorderly conduct and unlawful
assembly and provides penalties
for violations.
Included in the definition of
disorderly conduct is anyone
who creates a disturbance by
an act of violence, engages in
fighting or violent, threatening,
tumultuous behavior; a person
making an unreasonably loud
noise; causes likelihood of harm
by failing to obey a lawful
order, or one who disturbs
public property.
Under the ordinances it is
unlawful for any male person
to disturb any female person
by rude or indecent behavior
(See MAYOR, Page 2)
E in Mourning
After Nasser's Death
CAIRO (AP) — Hundreds of
thousands of grief- stricken
Egyptians kept a vigil today
outside Kubbah Palace, where
their revered leader, Gamal Ab-
del Nasser, lay in state.
The Egyptian president 52,
died of a heart attack Monday
night.
Thoughts in world capitals
turned to the question of his suc-
cessor and the future course of
events in the Middle East, par-
ticularly the U.S. peace plan.
Gathered at Nasser's bec.side
at the time of his death were
three men mentioned as possi-
ble successors. Vcie President
Anwar Sadat, who became act-
ing president, Air Marshal Aly
Sabri, and Gen. Mohammed
Fawzi, commander in chief of
Egypt's armed forces.
Nasser accepted the U.S. plan
for a cease -fire in the conflict
with Israel and his last official
act was to obtain a truce in the
bloody Jordanian civil war.
President Nixon was reported
to believe Nasser's death will
shelve the U.S. Middle East
peace initiative, at least for sev-
eral months. The thinking is
that the new Egyptian l:.3der
must Make a hd:der iieie to•;.aid
Israel.
Nixon was in the Mediterra-
nean today aboard the U.S. 6th
Fleet cruiser Springfield and
was going ahead with his clans
to visit Yugoslavia on Wednes•
day. President Tito of Yug;)-
slavia designated a top adviser,
Edvard Kardelj, to represent
him at Nasser's funeral.
Nixon is sending Robert H.
Finch, one of his principal ad-
visers, to be chief U.S. delegate
at the funeral.
A state funeral is scheduled
Thursday in the Egyptian capi-
tal.
Cairo Radio said every rail-
way station in the country was
filled with peasants demanding
passage to the capital. Mourn-
ers traveled the roadways in
buses, in cars, on donkeys and
on foot.
In the capital itself, crowds
roamed the streets Monday
night. People jammed buses
and taxis for suburban Koub-
beh, where the body of Nasser
lav in state in the presidential
palace. Others walked the Jozen
miles.
The government radio read
condolences from world leaders,
political enemies and friends
alike, most of them address,:d
to Anwar Sadat, who as vice
president became provisional
president under the constitution.
His term will be for 60 days,
during which Nasser's Arab So-
cialist union will choose a suc-
cessor.
A broadcast said one of the
new government's first official
acts was to declare a state of
"utmost emergency" along the
Suez Canal cease -fire line with
Israel to guard against any pos-
sible attack.
Cairo radio said the burial
will be at a mosque near Nas-
ser's home at Macnhiet el Bak -
ry, about five miles from Koub-
beh.
Arab heads of state and ether
foreign dignitaries are expected
to be pallbearers.
The Cairo broadcast said
those with Nasser when he died
included his wife Tahia; Lt.
Gen. Mohammed Fawzi, com-
mander in chief of the armed
forces; former Premier Aly
Sabry; Hussein Shafei, a former
vice president, and Sadat.
The officials are considered to
be among those most likely to
be named successor to Nasser,
the son of a postal clerk.
They were summoned to the
president's suburban home after
he became ill at the Cairo air-
port while seeing off Sheik Sa-
bah As -Salem As- Sabah, the ru-
ler of Kuwait. The sheik had
participated in an Arab summit
conference which Nasser called
and which formulated the
cease -fire in the Jordanian civil
war.
Sadat announced Nasser's
death over the state radio. Pro-
grannming then was interrupted
for readings of the Koran, the
sacred scripture of Islam.
"The hero, whose memory
will remain forever alive, was
struck by a severe heart attack
whose signs began appearing
after he returned home from the
last meeting of Arab kings and
presidents for which he devoted
all his efforts and energy in cr-
der to have the Arab nation
avert a big catastrophe," Sadat
said.
He called for "the whole Arab
nation to adopt a patient, coura-
geous and able stand in order to
achieve victory for which the
great son of Egypt and leader of
the nation died.'
radio said Monday night
that more than 250 people faint-
ed with emotion in the streets
and were hospitalized. There
were reports that some Egyp-
tians threw themselves in front
of cars.
Two Buildings
Ordered Razed
By DAVE KAYES
Eagle City Editor
Two structures were ordered
demolished —one over the ob-
jections of the owner —and two
other owners were given time
to make repairs Monday night
as Bryan's building standards
committee enforced provisions
of the recently - passed
Dangerous Building Ordinance.
Will R. Smith of 605 N. Sims,
who was told by the panel to
tear down his vacant house at
308 W. 20th, may be the first
citizen to test the wisdom of
the committee by appealing the
decision to the city commission.
Smith maintained that his
structure could be repaired to
make it conform with the city's
building standards and make it
habitable again.
He said he bought the
property after it had already
been condemned and planned to
fix the place up for his son
to live in, when he returns from
Vietnam.
Smith said the way he un-
derstood the new ordinance,
which was passed in March, the
owner of a building declared
"dangerous" had the option of
either tearing the structure
down or repairing it.
Committee chairman Floyd
Temple said this was "essen-
tially correct" but added that
he could not see why Smith
didn't tear the building down,
salvage the lumber and build
again.
"You don't have much to
remodel on, do you ?" he asked.
"It's in pretty bad shape," he
added, noting that floor of the
house and the porch seemed
especially unsafe.
Building inspector George
S ±ock, who with Fire Marshal
R.R. Janac and Sanitarian Alex
Allen inspected the house,
agreed with Temple that the
panel would probably be saving
Smith money in the long run
by ordering the building torn
down now.
"I just don't see how you can
want to repair a house in that
condition," he said.
Committee member Hubert
Graham sided with Smith,
arguing that if the man wanted
to repair the building, that was
his business.
If the building could be fixed,
Temple asked, how long would
It have to take?
Smith explained that his son
is sending money for the house,
usually every month, and as
much repair work is done as
money permits. He estimated it
would take six months to finish
the house.
Temple said this was too long.
Smith said he could probably
get the most dangerous parts
of the building taken down or
repaired within 15 days. He
added that the city should set
up a fund that "the people in
the ghetto" could borrow from
to help meet repair expenses.
The committee then voted,
with no dissent votes to order
the building demolished. Smith
has five days to appeal to the
city commission. If the com-
mittee is upheld, he has 30 days
to tear down his structure
without facing fines for
misdemeanor offenses.
The other building ordered
demolished is located next door
at 306 W. 20th and owned by
L.H. Washington of Houston.
(See DANGEROUS, Page 2)
GAMAL ABDEL NASSER DEAD
President Most Prominent of Arab Leaders
BRAZOS COUNTY COMMISSIONERS COURT PONDE RS 1971 BUDGET HEARING MONDAY AFTERNOON
, Members Are George Duna (L), Clyde Porterfield , Judge Bill Vance, Bill Stasney, Raymond Nolan
THE DAILY EAGLE
Page 2 Bryon - College Station, Texas Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1970
Mayor Given
Broad Powers
weather
Elsewhere
(Continued from Page 1) J In other business, the coun-
by using profane or obscene cilmen passed an ordinance
language in the presence of any requiring weeds and grass to
female in any public place. be cut and rubbish and trash
The ordinance also states that and stagnant water removed.
it is unlawful for any person The council also set the Oc-
to disturb the audience at any d ben meeting for Oct. 21. The
show, theater, or public *date was changed because l
gathering th boisterous talking, councilmen wished to attend the
whistling, stomping of feet, or Texas Municipal League con
v
any rude or indecent act or They.
also d i
conduct. They s e u s s e t°
regulations for the sanitary
"Where dial we get this or- landfill. The consensus was that
d i n a n c e ? " ' councilman Joe the landfill should not be used,
McGraw asked. "Obviously this by contractors to dump concrete
guy has never been to the and other building rubble. A'
Campus Theater." Ifinal proposal will be drawn up'
Councilman James Dozier and for next month's meeting.
McGraw objected to the "ar- Milton Radke, a traffic
ebaic" language of the or, engineer, reported on a traffic
d;nance. study of Jersey Street. The
"I can't see to disturb any 1 council has been studying safety
female person by rude behav- problems of the street and the
ior," Dozier said. "We have need for a traffic light.
statutes of the state against The council approved a
indecent advances and maybe contract with the Brazos County
this isn't an area the city should C o u n s e l i n g Service. Mayor'
1
get into." Anderson said the contract was Band G oes T I Paces for Parents
Dozier said that some parts i similar to the one signed Inv
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Louisville, clear
68
42
High
Low Pr.
Memphis, cloudy
75
:1/1
Albany, cloudy
64
45
.22
Miami, cloudy
85
73
Albuquerque, clear
65
46
Milwaukee, clear
55
39
Atlanta, clear
73
51
..
MPls -St. P., cloudy
6?
48
Bismarck, clear
75
38
..
New Orleans, cloudy 78
65
Boise, clear
81
47
.,
New York, clear
66
48 ,
Boston, cloudy
59
50
Okla. City, cloudy
I
75
59
Buffalo, cloudy
59
41
03
Omaha, clear
80
48
Charlotte, clear
73
45
Philadelphia, clear
65
43 ,
Chicago, clear
54
46
Phoenix, clear
84
62
Cincinnati
68
39
1 Pittsburgh, fog
58
38
Cleveland, cloudy
55
39
.211
Ptland, Me., cloudy
62
M
Denver, cloudy
74
48
1
Ptland, Ore., clear
85
49
Des Moines, clear
75
48
Rapid City, clear
77
45 ..
Detroit, cloudy
56
33
.Ql
Richmond, clear
64
45
Fairbanks, snow
39
29
.021
St. Louis, clear
71
50
Fort Worth, cloudy
74
59
Salt Lk. City, clear
77
44
Ielena, clear
75
34
..
San Diego, clear
93
70
ionolulu, cloudy
86
72
San Fran., cloudy
86
64
ndianapolis, clear
65
34
Seattle, clear
79
57
iacksonville, cloudy
91
60
.07
Tampa, cloudy
88
76 .10
luneau, rain
52
45 1.821
Washington, clear
72
48
lansas City, clear
81
58
Winnipeg, clear
69
44
.os Angeles, clear
93
71
M— Missing.
Stock Quotations
of the ordinance would ob- Bryan. . A &M Corsolidat. d band d rector Bill Adkins runs his students talkin G MORNING STOCKS Stand Ind 47 off 1 /8
g with teachers, parents had the opportunity to dis- By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS i Stand NJ 66 off 1 / 4
viously not be enforced and that James E. Poore of 40Z through s:l cted numbers for parents at the Consolidated open cuss various forms of financial aid for college with Texas AT &T .. .... 4 off 8 /sl Texaco ....... 311/ off x
sonee would. Fairview came before the h l night. In addition to touring new facilities and A &M's Robert Logan, director of financial aid. (Eagle Photo) Atl Rich .. .. .. 52 off 1/ Transitron ,. . 6/
"I don't want an ordinance council to ask for consideration — — - ____
on the books that we know we of an ordinance to limit the — Beth Stl .......21 off % Un Carbide .. ..38 off 1�
won't enforce and we could be time periods for garage sales. r 0 0 Borden .. ...... 22 off V I Uniroyal .. 17%
i t nt News Cat Trac ......35;s up 1/ US Steel .. .... 32 off �A
"I think the police need some Poore said a in progress garage J 4 Woodwth .. .. .. 33%
use Dozier said. discrimination in its,. sale has been in progress for � - -- Celanese 57 up 3
- - ------ - - - - -. Chrysler .. .. 26 off 5 /g
a week and is expected for
are
Adm itte d Cities Svc ..... 45 off 1 h Quotations are approximately
flexibility," Councilman Bill another week at the house next � .. .. '1z those of noon today, New York
Cooley said. d his. y Coca Cola 75 off said he has had his Fr Cont Oil .. .. ... 25 off %s time Over-the-counter
prices and do not in-
Over- the - counter stocks
c o u n c i 1 m e n Dozier and i driveway blocked and" has been i Crown Zel .. .. 31 up 1 /8 5 McGraw voted against the disturbed by the noise. Dow Chem ... , .68 off
ordinance, saying the language "I'm not against garage! s
was too broad arrd could be sales; I know they are v�ey I 3 /s elude commission.
duPont 118 off Eastman 66 off 5,�' American General Life . 13
s u bj e c t to abuse and good, but I feel maybe three I • • El Paso NG .... 16 off % Fidelity Union Life .... 27
• discrimination. days is enough." Poore said, T o S ingin g C adet Ranks Ford ..... .....1/0 off 1/ General Security Life .. 2
A parade ordinance was also "After that length of time, they , GAF __ .. ....11 off 1 / s Gateway Fund .......... 7
_ passed by the councilmen. The become a business and should Gen Elec ......83 off 1/ Holiday Inns ..:......... 32%
ordinance provided standards get a permit and move to a Gen Foods .. .. 75 off 5/8 Hospital Affiliates ...... 9
Gen Mfrs .. ... 71 / off > G Interco, Inc. .. 34
or permits and conduct during business district." Texas A &M's famed Singing students, of both the corps and I Group. He received his Ph.D. I in the Architecture Building Gen Tel .. 26 off 3/4 International Shelter .... I
parades. Under the ordinance Poore also reported that Cadets have accepted 25 new civilian ranks and varied' recently at Oklahoma State. auditorium will be Dr. William Gen Tire ..� .... 17 off 1 / 8 Lone Star Gas Co. .... 23
` a permit must be sought not rubbish and tree limbs were members including ive from academic majors. Both will do research.
less than seven and not more blocking the alley behind his Bryan - College Station into their Local buffos are Coy L. professor and now director of Gulf Oil ....... 273/ off A. Owens, former A &M English Great A &P ....27 off
If the % Natomas ................ 64
the Marcor ................ 2714
than e Y parade. a before the hou ible to making throughey >m- selctive 65 voice ranks for 1970 Batson, Larry R. .Jones, Jack Bryanite Among i folk materials at the University Int Paper .. .. ..355/ off 1//
permit refused, 71. T. Madeley and Eugene T of Texas. Kennecott .. 41 off 3/4 Reading & Bates ...... 30%
applicant may appeal to the city Mayor Anderson said the city' The Cadets are scheduled to wool. 65 Top Cadets Dr. Owens, who has written Mobil Oil .. 50% off 11/ Redman Industries .. . 24
co uncil. would look into the problems. sing 20 performances this fall , Clifford C. Liese of Bryan is several books, specializes in Monsanto ,..32 off
% SCM Corporation include two national con- 1
ng 2 J oin Faculty one of 65 Army ROTC cadet folklore and folk history, par- Pen Cent ., 75 poi•ateon ...... 15/
ventions in Houston. Th
e • ✓ s e n e o r s who have been /s Southwestern Life .... 31z
h titularly as it relates to the Penneky . , , . , .48ig off 7 1/ /8
C Schools ! th f l Singing Cadets also will appear I n Ell gln ee ring designated Distinguished Southwest. RCA 25z 1/R Southland Life ........ 35
as e oficia glee club for the Appointment of Dr. Curt F. Military Students for 197071. Safeway .,,31 up '/ Furnished by A. G. Edwards
seventh straight year at the Schenk and Dr. Darrell R. Col. Jinn H. McCoy, Safeway Editor Sears s v
Miss Teenage America Pageant Y, � . .... 67 / off .4 & Sons, Inc.
in Fort
• Worth Dec. 5. g Gimlin as assistant professors mandaet, said the desiti Due at Confab
Get Su rp r �t7 a of electrical en r1/ has indica adet gnates the on c possesses a The United Way
With invitations to sing been announced by Dr. W. B. o u t s t a n d i n ato:ibutes of ThelSth Texas Junior College coming from every major city Jones, department heart. leadership, moral character, Press APsociation Conference at
in Texas, the Cadets go on the A native of Bogota, Cniombia, military and academic standing A &M Oct, 12 and 13 will Feature •
(Continued from Page 1) explained, the computer will be road between semesters and on Schenk received his Ph.D. this and all- around development "Newsweek" official Charles W.
hoped the trustees would useable to note changes in the tax spring semester weekends total 50 performances a year. to year at the University of reflected in
it to establish a contingency roll as they occur. campus and civic RobertZ, S��rviees Added
I I Col 1 c i ado , h[is fii'Ftls of activities. The cwfpr4neo is expected to
fund for the school distrlc, s t d o n are
Y . "We should be able to always in announcing the new s p e c a 1 i z a elec- attract , 200 junior college
members, Boone saic, the tromechanical energy cop_ Prof to Retllrn journalists and faculty members
Tax Assessor - Collector Buddy be within a couple of hunrired Singing Cadets nave added version and application of op T from 30 institutions according By Re L. Kenneda reckoned that the dollars of the actual assessed exceptional talent. For cture ' hab Center
timization theory to electrical Ito ect David R. Bowers, TJCPA
'• major reason for the jump in valuation next year," Kenr±eda "The „
quality a the buffos machine design, Jones said. , Oil Field Tales and Other director.
assessed valuation is that more'said, the board. year," the
barring a raise in taxes. improves each g '
personal property went on the across 10- G i m 1 i n was with Bell Stories" will be the second i Rnberts, now a contributing
tax rolls. Another is the value
y e a r director commented. Laboratories from 1963 to 1966 installment in the 1970 -71 editor of "Newsweek " h s ( This is one of a series on During the year, physical
"This information should be Among the new members are and also has industrial ex- Universit Lecture Series. served 15 of his 19 a • agencies supported by the therapy 1 was administered to 103
added b new construction. Y ye ins wish Bryan United Fund and or c h n s and 430 adults.
Y a' great help in p.annir next several sophomores. Overall, I p e r i e n c e with Brown Guest lecturer for the ad- the magazine covering the Colle r
i d r e
The tax rolls must be cer- year's budget appropriations," Singing Cadets are drawn from Engineering and TRW Systems mission -free Oct. 8 presentation Whi House. ge Station United Chest. Therapy given to 109
u a
tified, Kenneda explained, for he noted. Both drives start Sunday.) persons in nursing homes.
-: the city to be able to sell bends The former tax official for Recru C ou n t y rring the year.
to the four existing du later this year. Texas City appraised the T During 1969 the Brazos Valley Forty persons participated in
Kenneda said he hopes that computer changeover process A d op ts �E i �►7 Rehabilitation Center added six the natural childbirth classes
services
with this year's switch tow "coming out rather well." A} �] • ones. computerized tax ralls, theI He estimated that witn the Mending The center saw 822 patients
guesswork will be ended in computer it took only 70 man- ` ��� They include recreational, during the year and held 10,561
estimating the value of the tax hours to prepare the roll, the • �ud et for 7- 1 ��N���L� therapy , orthopedic clinic sessions for both children and
roll at budget time. I tax receipts and statements. Fire Sc g FUNERALS i>t ►7 consultation, natural childbirth adults.
If a few programming bugs "It used to take at best 480 -- - classes, social service con- Harr Gillam serves as board
can be worked out, the taxman man -hours to car out the g ) suggestion, the sultation Y
carry (Continued from Page 1 Porterfield's s i� 77 , psychological con- president and John R. Bickner
Texas A &M's first six -week P gr y Mrs Hollins sultation, and a volunteer is director. Dr. L. W. Coleman
same process he said. exce t the commissioners are commissioners a eed to dela
I T' !t Next ear, if Kenneda can et .school for recruit firemen began f auxili WT A To Y g Monday with seven of the eight Paid . The county tom- consideration o . Godfrey 's a Jr. is medical director.
the computer to handle prat- g missioners' salaries come from requests until January. Funeral services for Mrs. R e g u 1 a r services include
L tecally all the accounting students representing Bryan- the road and bridge funl. The judge noted he had Mattie Lee Hollins, 59, of physical and speech therapy,
uv St a t ion '
College Station.
chores, things should move t
Bo ett told the commissioners received Godfrey 's letter in 614 Columbus College Station, training school, and equip
' g urchase and loan. P Fire Fig hting
1.1 faster still. Texas Firemen's Training he was a Mondays mail. are scheduled at 1 p:m. Wed - P Show Tonig
@ great believer in Y d Y g The purpose of the BVRC i,
Although a computerized tax School instructor David White competitive enterprise, but Count treasurer and nes a in the College Hill P P s
roll is nothing new for cities noted the school is the first of "we're in the position where we veterans' service officer Bell Baptist Church. to provide paramedical services
In Lar the size of Bryan, he noted that P Elkins told the commissioners and to offer treatment and•or Bryan and College Station
its kind held in Texas and a have to compete for business." probably resign as Mrs. Hollins died Saturday in assistance. It r a en s nd-o Fire Departments will host a
the town is one of the iPw that he will
pilot program for study by other He added that in recent Y ublic demonstration of new
WTAW radio station resident has its own data prooissing service officer in January. a Galveston hospital. The Rev. private, non-profit, non -tax P
P states. months the "good university" ' P P
system. The commissioners agreed to M. H. Harris of the Colle e Hill su fire -f1/ ht'
Rodger B. Watkins has announ- had not seen fit to file any cases g pported out - patient treatment g ing chemicals and
ced plans to purchase radio The capacity of the city's Six Bryan, one College Station with him and he was sure it set his salary as treasurer at Baptist Church is scheduled to cener. equipment at 6:30 p.m. today
station KLAR in Laredo. power plant makes having such and one Ennis firemen are had nothing to do with the way
Watkins said the agreement $8 when he drops the officiate, with burial planned in The BVRC, located at 3300 E. on Texas A &M's Brayton fire
a system possible, Kenneda' e n r o l le d . Classes continue he conducted his office. veterans' service officer title. Training Field.
id It' t the Riverside Cemetery in 29th, Bryan, also sponsors g
said. s practical too because The judge read a letter from
was reached between he and P through Nov. 6. Boyett is a party to a snit Hearne under direction of special programs such as The demonstrations are ex
the city also uses the computer in Charles SPinn of the Social
his partners John H. Hicks and to handle the utilities biller The Br an men are Bill g.l seek g to stop the state pay Services Division of the Dept. Mrs. Hollins was born Aug. for retarded children and
Mortuary. summer swimming, a day camp Pected to take about 90 minutes.
John H. Hicks III to add the g Y Y of A &M employes who are of public Welfare requesting ep cid
` station to the WTAW chain,, IPeters, Charles Michael members of the College Station 6, 1911, in Richmond and p arti e s.
U Banion, Donald F. Taylor, The for issi for foster care. P
Y The commissioners agreed to resided in Brazos County for 10 0
subject to Federal Com -I Y ,� i Council. ears. She was em to ed as a
munication Commissions a p IRobert G. Berkley, Melvin Much of the JPs' time is
Dangerous Wells and Fred L. Hernden. spent giving statuton warrmi 8 let the budget show the amount. Y P Y
proval. i g g g They heard, but turned down maid and was a member of the
Robert Carlton is enrolled from and suspending driver licenses, College App etite? The purchase will be made a r nest from the Rev. Gard: n ge Hill Ba fist Church.
(Continued from Page 1) the College Station Fire for which they receive no pay � Survivors include one from Don Reynolds of Fort I Washin on did not a ear at Jude McGee ex lained. Pry of the Brazos County gt PP Department and Ivery English g P Smith, Ark., who will retain lth hearin . • Vance then told Hi�hwa Counseling Service f nitre next for 82,000 daughter, Mrs. Frankie Moody
g s representing Ennis. Hi g five brothers
ownership of the Laredq Miss Luc Harrison of 501 E, Patrol Sgt. Paul Allen that cne y i Year, than the .5,000 B Hearne; , Dee
television station, Watkins said. 28th was given 60 days to repair Each municipal fire depart- quarter of the salary fund was budgeted. Britton, Clarence Britton, and
STATE FARM has a population of her property at 106 S. Main.I ment is paying its recruit's the direct result of tae business Next year's budget exceeds Joe Britton, all of College
76,000 and is served by two which used to be a movie expenses , $120 per man he did and asked if that had the current budget by $47,704. Station, Frank Walker of * 690, 1 0 •
: i Tomball INSURANCE
and Dan Britton of �
radio stations. KLAR is a 1,000 theater. registration fee and salary. slowed down,
: watt, full-time station and went Allen replied that the use Houston; and two sisters Mrs. •
The panel heard complaints I P White, who is coordinating the the breathalyzer hod cut into of
on the air in 1961. that water running through ompl s Sophia Loren Clara Figurs of College Station
WTAW presently has two hole in the roof of the building
s i s t e r stations, KLVI the Bryan Fire the road and they vere writing al program, said English is the time his officers spent on i� • and Mrs. Cora Watkins of Oak -
in was seeping onto the floors of assigned to Kisses Off wood. �(
Beaumont and KGYG in Big epartment during training. I fewer traffic violatitns. He also Scheduled as p are GOOD GUY
g neighboring businesses. I Lib Movement .
Spring, in addition to two FM said fines were less than they Eugene Ealman, James
P b Miss Harrison agreed to have He said the recruits will i ha1 been. ,,
stations. the roof fixed e s This, in effect, shifts money ) Ealman, Richard Blumer, Aron
,. ' the laks to PPS receive instruction in basic fire- NEW YORK AP —Movie
Y Blumer, Charlie Watkins and B.
"We are proud to make this ;.
and the windows boarded up to fighting techniques and ap from the salar und to the road st9r Sophia Loren has kissed off Foster Jr. ✓, rr.
keep pigeons
announcement of growth and to out. She said she'd psi stns operations, and fire and bridge fund, the judge said, the women's liberation move
show our faith in Bryan - College be en trying to get it done for station experience in Bryan and because DWIs are county court ment with the observation that.,
Station was well justified, all fly@ years but has not been able College Station. cases and traffic violations are "a woman shouldn't forget her
of the stations will operate to get a responsible contractor, JP cases. duties and responsibilities as a Gain Weight
under the WTAW umbrella," to do the work. . Fines from county court are woman." I Gain up to a pound a day.
Watkins said. The panel also gave Joe H• Rap B1'Ogb71 designated for the road and She told a news conference Take What the athletes take. r` .
Marin of 400 N. Sims 90 morel bridge fund and those from JP Thursday a woman "shows 1/.n -I Improve your statue, health,
I s Sentenced court go to the salary fund. telli energy days to repair his house on 306 � Bence or does not show it if and feeling of well be
In Absentia The JPs agreed at Vance's sh,. has too much." ing•
N. Simms and move it to its request, to work out a system c�ri
t new location on W. 28th Street. NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) — y Miss Loren stood alone on the i For results, see us about your
whereby one Of Chem will be
stage at Radio City Mann said he had run out Wherever he is, black militant available at all times. Y Music Hall Wei hr training prog
of money on the repair work. H. Rap Brown is under federal They also discussed letting to answer questions from about 9 s
• but said he could have the work' Dewe , 6,0001
,. See your doctor first; then
�•t sent 100 newsmen as about 6000
ence of five years in prison Y handle civil cases,
done within the alloted time. on a 1968 conviction for illegally "since he is an attorney and fans watched in the huge audito- bring your prescription to the
This was the second time the more familiar with the law," rJ um. DISCOUNT
courteous pharmacist at
transporting a firearm across a
building standards committer Boyett explained. stn P
to line. ,
has held hear Judge
CALL CLASSIFIED 822 -d90? hearings on Brown, missing for about a' Vance read a letter
' ''dangerous" buildings. The year and included in the FBI'slfrom probation officer John
panel ordered 16 structures "Ten Most Wanted" list, was Godfrey requesting an ad-
demolished Aug. 10 and allowed I sentenced in absentia Thursda ditional officer, salary increases
�
and
a 10 -day extension to destroy 'by Judge Lansing Mitchell of mil and a higher
another. 1 U A .S. District court. I eni] At allotment.
t Commissioner Clyde
DICK ROBERTS
And Family Invite You To
REVIVAL SERVICES
Calvary Baptist
SEPI- 27 —OCT. 4
10:00 A.M. -7:30 P.M.
APOTHECARY
The Small Store with the
Big Discounts"
3109 Texas Ave., Bryan
Phone 823 -0092
DICK MUNDAY
3202 So. College Ave.
Coll 822 -3725
STATE FARM
Insurance Companies
I Home Offices: Bioominyton, 111inois i
Joe Shaffer's
REDMOND TERRACE
DRUGS
846 -5701
FAST FREE DELIVERY
1402 Hwy. 6 South
FOR AUTO, LIFE 11/ FIRE INSURANCE
THE DA ILY AGLE
E
Vol. 94 — No. 23S
l News
Briefs
Kopechne Papers
BOSTON (AP) — The transcript of
testimony and the judge's report in the
Mary Jo Kopechne inquest will be made
public at 3 p.m. EDT Wednesday.
Chief Justice G. Joseph Tauro of
Massachusetts Superior Court stepped
Into the case Monday and ordered the
papers to be released, rejecting the
Maim of a professional court stenogra-
pher that he alone had a right to make
.opies of the documents and sell them.
Big Four
BERLIN (AP) — Amabssadors of the
United States, Britain, France and the
Soviet Union met today for a second
round of secret talks on reducing ten-
sions over divided Berlin. There was no
expectation an agreement might be
reached any time soon.
Meeting in the old Allied Control
ouncil building the ambassadors for
the World War II victors were expected
to expand on the basic positions they
)utlined at their first meeting March
26.
Kidnap Threat
FOREST RAW, England (AP) —
Police threw up a roadblock today at
he gates of an exclusive boarding
school attended by Viscount Linley, 8-
year -old son of Princess Margaret, and
reported target of a kidnap plot aimed
at freeing two jailed British crime
bosses.
Two constables barred the road to
kshdown House Preparatory School, 35
miles south of London. But police de-
,lined to comment on reports of a 24-
lour watch for the boy or of special
;bards for other royal children.
Concern Mounts
TEL AVIV (AP) — A stepup in Egyp-
tian military activity along the Suez
Canal heightened concern among Israeli
military officials today as more Israeli
casualties along the waterway were
announced.
The military command said one sol-
her was killed and one wounded Mon -
lay during an exchange of artillery fire
across the canal.
It was the fifth fatality in two days
among the Israelis dug in on the east
bank of the 103 -mile waterway.
Voting Rights
WASHINGTON (AP) — President
%xon's plea to lower the voting age to
18 by constitutional amendment has
)een criticized by a leading congression-
al Democrat as a means of defeating
he Southern - opposed Voting Rights Act.
Rep. Emanuel Celler, D -N.Y., chair -
nan of the House Judiciary Committee,
sermed the President's unexpected leg -
:slative maneuver "part of the South -
,rn strategy to kill the voting rights
sill. >
Vietnam War
SAIGON (AP) — The U.S. Command
announced today the loss of five more
aircraft in which 15 Americans died
ind six were wounded, and an acei-
iental bombing by U.S. planes that kill-
A 10 Vietnamese militiamen and wound -
�d 20 others.
Since 1876 Bryan- College Station, Texas Tuesday, April 28, 1970 22 inThree Sections 10 Cents
i 1�
iii ul
V �
What a Ride
Bobby Atkins (left) and Lee Harris, both 8, and they were trapped for at least seven days.
both from Baltimore, Md. rest in the dispensary Workers heard their screams after the car ar-
of Solvay Process plant after rescue from a rived at the plant in Syracuse, N.Y, suburb.
chemical carrying railroad hopper car where (AP Wirephoto)
A record $126,876,995
operating budget for the Texas
A &M University System in 1970-
71 was approved Tuesday by
its board of directors.
The new budget represents an
increase of almost 10 per cent
over the current year, with all
major parts of the system
receiving record expenditures.
Contracts totaling $1,805,533
were awarded for it con-
struction and related projects
and $419,010 was appropriated
for 13 additional undertakings.
Operating budgets for various
parts of the Texas A &M system,
effective Sept. 1, are: Texas
A &M University, $64,495,472, up
$6,078,782; Prairie View A &M,
$11,304,422, up $796,340; Tarlefon
State, $4,731,433, up $670,868,
and Texas Maritime Academy,
$1,019,822, up $214,301.
Also the Texas Agricultural
Experiment Station, $15,540,256,
up $1,186,048; Texas
Agricultural Extension Service,
$15,106,851, up $2,183,834; Texas
Engineering Experiment Station
(including Texas Transportation
I n s t i t u t e), $7,579,566, up
$684,508; Texas Engineering
Extension Service, $1,532,020, up
$183,977; Texas Forest Service,
$2,757,093, up $55,209, and
Rodent and Predatory Animal
Control Service, $579,409, up
$8,701. System offices and
Appointment Action Delayed
By FRANK GRIFFIS
Eagle Staff Writer
The College Station City
Council agreed last night to
defer appointment of four
Planning and Zoning Com-
mission members until a special
meeting Friday.
The terms of four com-
missioners, Wendell Horne, Carl
Tishler, R. R. Rhodes and Jim
Gardner, expire this year..
The council reviewed Gard -
rler's proposed ordinance which
officially sets up the Planning
and Zoning Commission. Mayor
D. A. (Andy) Anderson said the
present Planning and Zoning
Commission stemmed from the
old Zoning Commission which
was established by ordinance in
1939.
Anderson said the number of
commissioners was increased
from the original five to seven
and the present nine. He added
that the increase was made by
council action, not by ordinance.
"Theoretically the council had
no authority to increase the
number from five to seven to
nine without, I am informed,
going to an ordinenoo. Aloe we
created a Planning and Zoning
Commission whereas we had
only a Zoning Commission,"
Anderson said.
He added that the council's
Economists See
Inflation Drop
WASHINGTON (AP) — Eco-
nomic indicators point to a
sharp slowdown in inflation this
fall, two top economists predict.
They made their statements on
a day the stock market suffered
its worst slump in six years and
other signs revealed a troubled
economy.
In making this assessment in
speeches to the United States
Chamber of Commerce Monday,
Walter W. Heller, former chair-
man of the Council of Economic.
Advisers under former Presi-
dent Johnson, and Beryle W.
Sprinkel of Chicago supported
Nixon administration conten-
tions that the over -all price rise
will slow sharply in the autumn.
But, as they spoke, other indi-
cations of a sagging economy
caused concern in the business
community.
In New York, the stock mar-
ket's Dow Jones Industrial aver-
age fell 12.14 points to 735.15,
the worst drop since Nov. 22,
1963, the day President John F.
Kennedy was assassinated.
And, in Detroit, General Mo-
tors and Ford, the nation's.larg-
est automobile manufacturers,
said that auto sales and profits
were down in the opening quar-
ter this year, although both still
finished in the black.
Ford reported its consolidated
sales in the opening three
months down by 5 per cent,
while GM's sales fell by 14 per
cent during the same period.
At the White House, President
Nixon conferred with his Coun-
cil of Economic Advisers and
five other economists called in
for a special discussion of the
nation's economic outlook.
Administration officials de-
nied the talks were directly con-
nected to the stock market
slump. One informant said the
discussion was scheduled some
time ago and was "a general
bull session —a kind of educa-
tional process for the President,
to let him hear what others in
the economic field are think-
ing ''
action was not legal since it
was not done in terms of an
ordinance. He said that nine
members has been too un-
wieldly in the past.
"There is a consensus that
nine members is too unwieldly
and there is need for a practical
ordinance to spell out the
membership and their
responsibilities," Anderson said.
Anderson pre_eQr trd an or-
dinance establishing the com-
wiveinn of re :fin members
which was combined with the
points made in Gardner's
proposal.
Councilman McGraw moved
to table Anderson's proposal,
Consumer
Sizzling In
Hotdog Fat
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Nixon administration decision
against disclosing the brand
name of "fat" hotdogs has
drawn the fire of a consumer
spokesman who says proces-
sors are hiding behind bureau-
cratic skirts.
"Maybe I bel'eve in the free
enterprise system more than
the administration," said
Erma Angevine, executive
director of the Consumer
Federation of America.
"I say put 'em in line and
let them compete in the open
market and let the consumer
decide," she said.
Mrs. Angevine's comments
followed the refusal Monday
of the Agriculture Department
to list the names of meat
packers charged under a new
federal regulation to keep the
fat content of hotdogs and
other cooked sausages to a
minimum of 30 per cent.
Until last October 23 when
the 30 per cent limit went into
effect, there was no federal
maximum on the amount of
fat in hotdogs.
Eight of the Americans were killed
n an Army UHI helicoper shot down
Monday in the Central Highlands 21 Hiles southeast of Pleiku City. The only
iurvivor was wounded. a n d id a tes To ss D
Cloudy
Bryan - College Station Area Forecast: Consid-
rabie cloudiness and warm tonight and Wednesday.
Low tonight in the Wednesday: Sunrise 6:44 a.m.
upset 8:02 P.m.
Temperature: To noon today, low 74 degrees
d ? a.m.; high 78 degrees at 11:30. nigh Monday,
4; low, 73.
Rainfall: For the past 24 hours ending today, 0.
ital this week, 0; total this month, 4.13; total this
car, 1318.
Nina velocity: From the S-SE at 12 miles per
our.
Relative humidity: 76 per cent.
Barometric Pressure: 29.48 and rising.
S
1�
D
E
x
Ann Landers .............. 3
Bridge .................... 5
Comics................... 4, 5
Deaths...................... 2
Editorials .................... 6
Heloise 3
Horoscope ................ 5
Sports..................... 10
Spot 7
Stock Quotations ............ 7
Television .................. 5
Want Ads ............ 7, 8, 9
Weather Elsewhere ......... 7
Women's News ............ 3
As dace Nears Finale'
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Candidates in the Texas pri-
maries sharpened political barbs
Monday while campaign expens-
es revealed a costly U. S. Senate
race.
Sen Ralph Yarborough, seek-
ing the Democratic nomination
for another term in balloting
Saturday, attacked the conserva-
tion record of his opponent, for-
mer congressman Lloyd Bent=
sen.
Rep. George Bush, who hopes
to be the Republican vying for
Yarborough's post in the Novem-
ber general election, said the
"hotly contested" Democratic
race will help his chances.
Robert Morris, who opposes
Bush in the GOP primary, said
his opponent's campaign advis-
ors must change tactics "to sal-
vage their candidate" in the
next few days.
Bentsen, a millionaire Houston
businessman, said he had spent
$488,099 as of April 22 on his
campaign, his expense report
filed in the Secretary of State's
office showed.
Yarborough claimed campaign
expenses of $118,466.
"That would indicate expenses
of twice that much, because
there are people who spend mon-
ey for you that you never know
anything about," Gov. Preston
Smith observed of the two can-
didates.
Morris' report showed he has
spent $24,876 in his race against
Bush, who said he made cain-
paign payments of $124,888.
Yarborough attacked Bent -
sen's conservation record in a
Lufkin speech, where he said the
Senate Parks and Recreation
Subcommittee would hold bear-
ings June 12 on his bill to create
a Big Thicket national park.
"He (Bentsen) was in Congress
for six years," Yarborough said.
He represented the district
which included much of Padre
Island. He never introduced a
bill to create Padre Island Na-
tional Seashore. We had no lead-
ership then. My bill created the
park."
"The incumbent senator has
been anything but a unifying in-
fluence during his political ca-
reer," Bentsen said in Browns-
ville, "and you can't teach an
old politician new tricks."
"He claims proudly that he is
a fighter, but he would not have
to fight so much if he knew how
to reason with people," Bentsen
said, adding that Yarborough is
"just a damned troublemaker."
GREAT SAVINGS PLANS made
even better by new legal rates
at FIRST BANK & TRUST. Adv
but his motion died for lack
of a second.
"It didn't appear on the
agenda as an, item for one, and
I don't think I have had time
to study it. It applies a test
of membership on this par-
ticular board that I'm not so
sure we have applied to these
other boards we have men-
tioned; namely the members
shall he residents of the city,
qualified voters and real
prnperty owners." McGraw
said.
"And I'm just not so sure all
the people we have appointed
tonight fall into that category
See CS COUNCIL Page 2
departments, only category
showing a decrease, received
the remaining $2,230,651.
Contracts included $188,500 to
Young Brothers, Inc., C o n -
t r a c t o r s , of Waco, field
preparation for track surfacing
and field turf; $83,274, Cloud
Associates, Inc., of Marble
Falls, construction of swine
management and waste haw
dling facilities; and $10,40,
Brazos Valley Nursery of
Bryan, landscape planting,
veterinary medicine complex
and student apartments, all at
Texas A &M.
Five contracts were awarded
for equipment and furniture for
Texas A &M's new engineering
center now under construction.
Awards included $309,250 to
Kewaunee Scientific Corp. of
Adrian, Mich.; $69,994, Hamp-
den Engineering Corp., East
Longmeadow, Mass.; General
See A &M DIRECTORS Page 2
Group Opposes
Awns to Cambodia
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee has made clear to the ad-
ministration it opposes any U.S.
arms aid to Cambodia despite
that embattled nation's plea for
enough military hardware to
outfit a large army.
"The committee was virtually
in agreement and very firmly
against sending assistance,"
said Chairman J. W. Fulbright,
D -Ark., after Secretary of State
William P. Rogers briefed the
panel behind closed doors Mon-
day.
Agreeing with Fulbright, sen-
ior Republican committee mem-
ber Sen. George Aiken of Ver-
mont said he is sure "the Presi-
dent will take into consideration
how this committee feels."
Fulbright and Aiken met with
newsmen following the 2 -hour
session with Rogers.. The seere-
tary left hurriedly saying he
didn't have time to comment.
Fulbright quoted Rogers as
saying the Cambodians had
made a "very large request for
equipping a very large army,"
including rifles, trucks, half -
tracks and airplanes —but not
military personnel.
Fulbright said the administra-
tion apparently has made no de-
cision on going beyond what it
already has done.
Publicly, at least, this has
been confined to approving
South Vietnamese shipment of
captured Soviet AK47 rifles and
allowing armed forays into
Cambodian territory by South
Vietnamese soldiers.
When asked whether the ad-
ministration had considered air
support for Cambodian troops
and whether this would consti-
tute aid, Fulbright said the
question had been asked but
that he "really couldn't remem-
ber" what Rogers answered.
Neither could Aiken.
Fulbright said the administra-
tion apparently was not over'.y
concerned about the North Viet-
namese and Viet Cong troops
roving Cambodia, but believed
any substantial increase in their
activity could threaten plans to
continue winding down the Viet-
nam war.
Absentee Vote
Ends Today
Absentee voting for the
Saturday Democratic and
Republican primary was to end
today at 5 p.m.
Around noon today, 178 votes
had been recorded, said county
clerk Frank Bodiskie. "It has
been going good so far," he
said.
Possible Landfill Sites
B y
Eagle Staff Writer
The College Station City
Council rescinded their action
in a previous meeting
authorizing the city Manager
Ran Boswell to purchase land
in the Oak Hills Subdivision for
a sanitary land fill during last
night's meeting.
Boswell said he was in-
vestigating two possible sites
for the land fill, but that he
could release the price of the
land or who owned the land.
John Lawrence, attorney, was
spokesman for the Oak Hills
residents. Lawrence told the
council that the proposed Oak
Hills site drained into the
Brazos River and could pollute
it.
"You have a difficult problem
because the land fill has to go
somewhere and next to
someone. I believe the Oak Hills
Addition is an ideal area for
Investigated: Boswell
FRANK GRIFFIS you to annex and develop," that sanitary land fills
Lawrence said.
"The land owners earnestly
request that you look elsewhere
into a less developed area,
possibly one that the garbage
trucks could get into easier,"
Lawrence said.
Councilman Joe McGraw said
that the city does not intend
to pollute any area that they
choose for the land fill site. He
asked the Oak Hills residents
for recommendations for other
sites.
"We would be glad to discuss
in private some good sites
rather than talk in public and
let speculators seize the
- chance," Lawrence said.
Councilman James Dozier
said he doesn't feel the city can
give assurances that they won't
pollute land fill areas, but that
the city will not try to pollute
them. He added that he feels
will last
more than 10 years until
someone comes up with a better
idea.
In other business, the council
heard a request from
representatives from the Brazos
Counseling Service for $10,000
for the new fiscal year. The
BCS also requested permission
to offer counseling services in
C o 11 e g e Station, possibily
locating a case worker in the
City Hall for one day a week.
Boswell told Rev. Guy Pry,
BCS representative, that there
was no room in the new city
hall, but that the old ciy hall
may be available for one day
a week.
Councilman Bill Cooley asked
the representatives if the BCS
had considered relocating their
headquarters.
"Most of the people who visit
us and receive counseling want
to remain as anonymous as
(See SITE, Page 2)
Quints Leave Hospital
Five nurses hold the bundled -up Kienast quin- From left, nurse Lucy Blatty holds baby Amy,
tuplets as the babies leave Columbia Presby- Elke Wyck with Sara, Patricia Duffy with Wil-
terian Medical Center in New York for their liam Gordon, Patricia Morris with Abigail and
home in Liberty Corner, N.J. In background Loretta de Lellis with Edwards. (AP Wire -
are the parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Kienast. photo)
Page 2 Bryan - College Station, Texas THE DAILY EAGLE
Site Selection Held
(Continued from Page i)
possible. In the Varisco Building
(present headquarters), they
can do so because so many
people come in and out
frequently. Therefore, we don't
plan to relocate," Rev. Pry
said.
Rev. Pry said that their case
load is increasing and that the
BCS needs more help.
One 'of the representatives
said that many persons call for
help, but unless it is an
emergency, they may have to
wait for three to four weeks.
She said this was the main
reason for the $1,500 increase
in funds over last year's
request.
" I, and I feel the council feels
the same way, appreciate the
services the Brazos Counseling
Service provides to the county
and feel we will consider your
request when the new budget
comes up," Mayor D. A. (Andy)
Anderson said.
In other business, the council
agreed to forward a letter of
intent to pave the streets and
assess the property owners for
the construction on a 50 foot
by 200 foot tract between Luther
and Holleman. The land, owned
by the Catholic Diocese, is
slated to be student housing and
will cost approximately $3
million, according to Anderson.
Anderson said the city will
let the contract on the
pavement.
The council also approved
ordinance 681 which orders the
improvement of portions of
Spruce from Boyett to College
Main N. and Suffolk from
Pershing to Park Place. They
also agreed to have the city
engineer survey other city
s t r e e t s for possible im-
provements.
"Some of the people on the
street can't get participation
and it is not a very busy
street," Anderson said.
"Spruce Street is quite busy
after they built all the houses
and apartments. There is a hole
in the street two feet deep and
two feet wide and last week
two cars were stuck in it at
the same time," a home owner
on Spruce declared.
The council asked if any other
street needed improvements
and recognized Mrs. Ed Miller
of 504 Guernsey who advanced
to the council table.
"Words haven't done a darn
bit of "good so here are some
pictures of our street," Mrs.
Miller said, brandishing some
snapshots of Guernsey showing
potholes in the street.
"Fo: about three weeks now
we have had a sign in front
of our house for everyone to
see that says '504 apologizes for
the condition of Guernsey
Street - promises are easy and
cheap -our taxes do not reflect
the lack of maintenance - signed,
the Millers," Mrs. Miller read
from one of the snapshots.
She added that the sign had
brought a lot of comment from
the persons around her home.
Anderson said the im-
provement of Guernsey was
supposed to be on this year's
street program and that it
should have been attended to.
"I apologize myself because
the city has not done this,"
Anderson said.
Tuesday, April 28, 1970
In other business, the council developers to install sidewalks,
held a public hearing and ap- but the new proposed sub -
proved a request to rezone a division does. The council will
10.84 acre tract of land located consider the new ordinance
at the southwest corner of during a special meeting Friday
Welsh and Southwest Parkway. evening.
The proposed commercial site The council also held a public
is approximately 400 feet from he;,ring and approved a request
the site of the new A &M Con- to rezone lots 7, 1, 8, and 6,
solidated High School. Block 2 of the Kapeninskie
The council also called two Subdivision to commercial
public hearings for rezoning on zoning. The 2.33 acre tract
fronts on Park Place and State
four tracts of land adjacent to
the Swoboda Mobile Home Park Highway 6.
across from the College Station In other business, the council
City Cemetery on State High- rejected a petition presented by
way 6. George Eby, city 12 persons who said they live
planner, said the land is slated on Krenek -Tapp Road to change
to be developed into a nine -acre the name of the street to
mobile home park. Josephine Lane. The council
agreed that the street should
In other business, the council retain its present name.
approved the revised master The council agreed to request
preliminary plat of the the State Highway Department
University Arms Subdivision. A t
discussion arose when persons to reconsider a change in the
in the audience disapproved of speed limit on State Highway
the trees being cut down to 6 from 70 miles per hour to
make room for proposed 45 or 50 mph. The council
townhouses in the subdivision. considered a petition by lan-
downers on Highway 6 South
The subdivision is adjacent to from Highway 30 to, south of
the East Bypass, bordered on Mile Drive, but agreed that they
the north by lots fronting did not have the authority to
Dominik Drive, on the west by change the speed limits.
Munson, and on the south by The Highway Department
State Highway 30. The sub- recommended that the speed
division includes four sections, limit in the area remain at 70
with section four under reserve mph.
for future development.
Harry Seaback, developer, In other business, the council
assured the council that he granted Anderson permission to
attend the
would lay underground utilities
and would provide sidewalks if and in Denver Mayor's Con -
the subdivision ordinance calls, granted Boswelll l May and Dozier
for them. , permission to attend the annual
conference of Municipal
The present subdivision or- Finance Officer's Association in
dinance does not require Miami, Fla., May 25 -28.
Council Names Ransdell
C. H. Ransdell was elected
Mayor Pro Tem by the College
Station City Council during their
meeting last night.
The council also appointed
approximately 150 persons to 15
committees according to Mayor
D. A. (Andy) Anderson.
Included were appointments
of city council members as
liasion members of several
boards.
C. H. Ransdell was appointed
as liasion to Parks and
Recreation; Dan Davis, Health;
Melvin Luedecke, Safety; Bill
Cooley, Planning and Zoning;
Boswell, Annual Report; Dozier,
Business Development; and
McGraw, Cemetery.
The audience laughed when
they heard of McGraw's ap-
pointment.
"How can you call the ap-
pointments balanced when your
only professional planner is on
the Cemetery Committee," 1VIrs.
Mary Bryan of 1402 Laura
Lane, asked.
Families To
Have Room
Texas A &M University May
graduates can count on their
immediate family being present
for commencement exercises
under a ticket plan approved
by the university's Convocations
Committee.
Dr. C. W. Landiss, committee
chairman, noted last year ap-
proximately 400 persons were
not able to get into G. Rollie
W h i t e Coliseum for the
program.
This year, however, a guest
limitation has been placed
which Landiss said guarantees
wives, parents, children,
brothers and sisters of a
graduate admission first to the
coliseum.
Texas A &M expects t o
graduate 1,535 students. The
coliseum will seat an additional
6,500 people, which Landiss said
is enough for each graduate's
immediate family.
Each graduation candidate
has been mailed four guest
tickets. If all or part of these
tickets are not needed, the
candidate is asked to return the
unused tickets to the Regisrar'5
Office as soon as possible.
If additional tickets are
needed by a degree candidate,
they may sign up at the
Registrar's Office and the
request will be screened.
Graduation exercises are
scheduled for 9 a.m. Saturday,
May 23. Commissioning is set
for 1:30 p.m. and final review
of A &M's 3,000- member Corps
of Cadets is set for 3:30 p.m.
Food Stamps To
Have Numbers
The U. S. Department of
Agriculture has accelerated
plans to put serial numbers on
all food coupons used in the
Food Stamp Program.
New coupons are being
numbered like dollar bills to
make, it easier to track known
stolen or fradulently used
coupons.
"How come you didn't consult Charlie Clark, T. W. Hughes, Alex Allen. - College Station representative on the
Dean Romieniec of the College and Bill Kling were reappointed. Easterwood Joint Board of Adjustment,
g -Parks and Recreation Committee, M. L. Cashion.
of Architecture and En- James C. Stribling, David Alsmeyer, Dr.
vironmental Desi when it Warren B. Anderson, William B. Lan- T caster, Mrs. James Tear, Mrs. F. L. Colleges
comes to appointments under Thomas. »r. A. c. colp, Dr. John
" Beckham, Mrs. A. A. Price, Dr. Roger
his professional area, John Feldman, Dr. William Hoover, Tommy
Brewer, graduate student at H. Preston and Hai Compete On
Texas A &M University, asked. -Annual Report rt commitnrit tee, Herb
"To amplify that, yon didn't Brevard, Ed Miller, R. R. Rhodes, Cliff
J. Leabo, Doyle Gouglar, John Haislet,
even consult the Department of and Tommy Raul. Computers Urban and Re ional Plannin Health Committee, Joe Sorrels, Alvin
g g> Zeller, Jim Poore, Cathcart, Dr. Manning Dr. E. L. (Hap) Mc
McGraw said. Murry, Dr. A. B.
Price, Dr. T. O. Walton, Dr. R. D.
"I don't want to get into that. Radeleff and Dr. Dorothy Robinson.
Now I could bring out some Safety Committee, Ira Scott, E. V. putting aside their balls and
Wallace, William E. Beach, Ernest Gregg,
other things, but I don't care col. Howard M cold.„ th- Jr.. c,-.. bate, five Southwest Colife.reme
to discuss it," Anderson Manning, Melvin Luedecke, Jim Wallace schools and ei ht other Texas
U. M. Parish, David C. Ruesink, Dr. g
retorted. Virgil Stodal. colleges battle with computers
The Council tabled the ap- -City Cemetery Committee, Dr. Robert Saturday at Texas ABtM Urii-
ointment of members of the Merrifield, C. E. Sandstedt, George
1 ) MacArthur, Mrs. Melvin Rudtger, Mrs. verslty.
proposed Business Development B. J. Cooley. Mrs. C. B. Campbell, Mrs.
Committee until the special A °tone Rosborough, Mrs. Curtis Lusk, The occasion is the first an-
Mrs. James Amyx, Mrs. T. W. Leland,
meeting Friday evening. The Mrs. F. F. Bishop Pugh, L. P. Gabbard, M. K. Duke, , Mrs. Marianne c. nual Texas Computer Program -
council said that they favor the rrung Championships, believed
development of the committee.
Thornton, Peggy Owens, and J. J. Malone,
to be the first competition of its
The committees and appointments are: -City Beautification Committee, Bluef- type in the nation. Six blue
-Board of Equalization, R. J. Hodges, ford Hancock, Mrs. Clara Sandstedt, Lane
Jr. B. Stephenson, Robert Logan, Mrs companies are providing cash
- Housing Board of Adjustment and Richard Baldauf, Mrs. C J Leabo, Carl prizes for the winners.
Appeals, Alton (Sam) Luther. E Patton, Mrs. C. K. Leighton, James
- Mayor's Special Committee. Phillip K. Raatz, Mrs. H. S. Creswell, A. C. Texas A &M and its IBM 360 -
Steen, Jr., Rev. L. W. Flowers, Joseph Benson, Mrs. Raymond Reiser, Mrs. C.
H. Williams, Joe Payton, Tommy Preston, M. Peterson. Mrs. Sadie Hatfield, Phillip 65 computer will host the Uni-
Lorenzo Wilburn, W. A. Terrell, and D. Bouglart, Mrs. Ed Holdredge, Mrs. VerSlt y of Texas - Austin, Texas
Clinton Robinson. Richard Wadsworth, Dr Morris Merkel,
- Electrical Examining Board, John Dr. Stuart Leda Tech, Baylor, TCU, University
Denison, L. P. Dulaney, Robert P. - Citizens Advisory Committee, two of Houston East Texas State,
Chenoweth. members from each of the major com- e ,
- Building Code Board of Adjustment, mittees and one member from each of Southwest Texas State, Pan
C. N. Leighton, Codie wells, and John the minor committees, and volunteers American, Prairie View A &M,
Berry (reappointed). - Easterwood Joint Airport Zoning Board,
- Plumbing Appeals and Advisory Board, Hal Murray and Lloyd James, city Abilene Christian, LeTourneau
Raymond Schulz and Lloyd James engineer. and Wharton Cou Junior Col-
* * * * * * lege.
Dr. Roger Elliott, Texas A &M
CS Council Delays industrial engineering professor
who is coordinating the event,
sistin said each school will be repre- b u to two teams con-
Act on Planners sente of as many as four Stu -
dents per team.
(Continued from Page 1) what to do with his property. The teams will be given three
and I would wonder why the "I hate for Joe McGraw, who identical problems, with judging
differing standard if that is the has very little interest in this based on the elapsed time for
case. Second, I would like to community, to tell me what I successful completion of all
ask Mr. Gardner if he has had should do with my property. In three assignments. One problem
time to review this as a com- fact I think a lot of businessmen will be mathematical and the
missioner," McGraw said. are getting a bellyful of this other two general, Dr. Elliott
Anderson said the commission because it's wrong, it's wrong IIOpri es totaling $200 are being
has not reviewed the revised as it can be," Dale said. furnished by IBM, Univac, Uni-
proposal. "They do nothing in the world versity Computing Co., General
"I did put that in because but stir things up and leave. Dynamics, Atlantic Richfield
[ think the home owner has a Yeah, you're temporary, Joe, and Shell Oil Co.
big responsibility in this mat- you sure are," Dale said. The program is jointly spon-
er, Anderson said. sored by Texas A &M's Data
McGraw said he thinks it He added that he thought the processing Center and Indus -
would be unfair to allow the mayor should make all ap- trial Engineering Department.
absentee homeowner to occupy pointments without consulting Competition will be conducted
a commission post and not let the council. by Upsilon Pi Epsilon ,national
a renter. . McGraw said he would like honor society for computing
"If I had the dough, I'd to hear the current acting science students, and the Texas
challenge the constitutionality of chairman of the commission A &M student chapters of the
that. I don't think that should (Codie Wells) to say that nine Data Processing Management
be required because I think members was too cumbersome. Association and the Association
property ownership and rights "Do you know of any city for Computing Machinery.
of citizenship are King George Where they have that many?
stuff," McGraw said. I recommend seven," Anderson
McGraw said he has been a said.
renter for the last five years The council tried to amend
and that he "is still here, but Anderson's proposed ordinance
still worried." to set the dates of appointing
"Well I'm not worried seven commissioners. After
because I think the solid rejecting McGraw's motion to
citizens of this community will table the ordinance and the
win out," Anderson said. appointment of commissioners,
Don Dale, developer, said he the commission decided to defer
would hate to see someone who action until the special meeting
has vested interests to tell him Friday evening.
BUSINESS MACHINES
• ROYAL • VICTOR
TYPEWRITERS
CALCULATORS SALES
ADDING MACHINES RENTALS
CASH REGISTERS TERMS
Manual and Electric Portable
SERVICE
Typewriter by Smith Carona
CALL CLASSIFIED, 822 -3707
Students
Honored
At Dinner
A &M Directors Ap
The Distributive Education Record O eratin Midaet
and Industrial Co-operative
Training Classes of Steph F. (Continued from Page 1) $25,000, supplement for detailed recommended the current $
Austin High School held their Electric Co., Houston, $48,362; design, low- density dormitory reinstatement fee for firs
a n n u a I Employer - Employee A i r c l e a n Corp., Carrollton, complex; $15,000, preliminary violation be doubled each tim
Banquet Monday night at Anson $18,511; and Ray Proof Corp., design, educational television f o r subsequent violation
Jones Junior High School. Norwalk, Conn., $8,540. building, and $15,000, renovation through the fifth offense, whit
Guest speaker was Dan Appropriations i n c I u d e d of Research Annex building, all would require a $32 payment
Warden of A &M Church of $92,500 for converting space in at Texas A &M. The violator's campus permi
Christ. two Corps of Cadets dormitories Contracts were awarded by ' may be revoked for remainde
The Outstanding Distributive to residence rooms; $70,000, of the semester after the sixtl
Education Student trophy was supplemental funds for detailed the board to three firms for hospitalization and life in- `isolation.
awarded to Danna Gough, design of Memorial Student
president of the D. E. Club, by Center - auditorium complex; surance for system employes, University officials noted th
Herbert Shaffer, Commercial $83,010, engineering on water effective Sept. 1. Southwestern a d d i t i o n a l parking perml
Division Chairman of the B -CS projects; $30,000, preliminary Life Insurance Co. received revenue will be used for mor
Chamber of Commerce. design, athletic dormitory; contracts for life, basic hospital parking facilities, since state
The employer of the Year 1 and major medical coverage. appropriated funds cannot b
Award was given to Don 7t * Continental Casualty Co. was used for such projects.
selected for long -term disability
Yarborough of J. rr B. o White C Brown. n. coverage and Continental In- 13 -CS Realtors
Yarborough said he
employer of Sharrn was once Challenges surance Companies for ac-
cidental death and dismem-
a D. E. student, himself. To Hear Meeks
A $25 check was presented to Face A &M b Board members voted to
.
Board
Linda Burch, the most im renew Texas A &M's student The B -CS Board of Realtor
proved senior girl, by Mrs, health service and insurance will have their monthly lur
Paula Tucker of the Altrusa cheon meeting
at noon Monda
plan with Mutual of Omaha g
Club. ays Wells Insurance Co, through the R. at Clayton's.
A plaque was presented to M. Jackson Agency in Bry y
Bryan. Ton Meeks, officer of th
Paul McCarty, most improved Texas A &M University is The board also renewed the
Texas Association of Realtor
senior boy, by Jim Wright, vice- challenged by its responsibility ROTC flight training contract
president of the B -CS Junior to meet the needs of society, with Texas Airmotive Company, will be guest speaker.
Chamber of Commerce. Clyde H. Wells, president of the of Brazos County. I
Plaques were also presented A &M Board of Directors, em- In other action, the board LADIES! SLIM
to Carla Schneider, most im- phasized Monday at a faculty- approved University Traffic YOUR FIGURE
proved junior girl, and Richard staff dinner. Committee recommendations to
Medina, most improved junior Wells said the challenges increase parking fees $5 this Rent
boy. include pollution and other I fall, to $15 for a full year for
A DECA Past Presidents z> Belt
Plaque was presented to problems of the environment, as students, faculty and staff. The
u t g o i n g president Danna w ell as stepped -up production of board also adopted a $12 rate Massage
Gough. food and fiber to meet world for nine months, $7 for a
Mitzi emands. semester or trimester and $6 $900
DECA we Sweetheart. was named "These are real problems — for the summer sessions.
Club Vy S Swe c o m p 1 e x problems," Wells Traffic violation fines were Per Me.
A n Outstanding Service pointed out. "If the great modified.
D.
Award plaque was given to e; universities of this country can't T h e University Traffic Kraft Furniture Co.
)f Coordinator Percy Pace; face up to these fundamental Committee, composed of Ph. 822 - 5019
)resident, Danna Gough; vice o s' pins were presented t problems of mankind, who can? s t u d e n t s and faculty- staff,
— -- -- --
-
p r e s i d e n t, Betty Blevins- Who will?"
secretary, Sharon Wallace; "With this faculty and the Our 22nd Year Serving Our
treasurer, Richard Medina; facilities and equipment at Wonderful Customers With .
e p o r t e r, Mark Lynch; Texas A &M today, few i))-
)hotographer, Paul McCarty; stitutions in the nation are more Professional Fur Care
igt, at Arms, Alfred Macias; competent to make em-
senior representative, Linda tributions," he added. This Is the Time to Bring Your Furs
3urch; and junior Represen- Wells assured approximately to Us for CLEANING, REPAIRS,
:ative, Janis Gough. 650 faculty -staff members the and SAFE STORAGE.
ICT Merit Awards were board of directors is challenged
)resented to Pat Morgan, and pledges to do everything CURRY FURS
3rodie Pate, Larry Conlee, Joe within its power to provide the
Uilberger and Jon Teague. necessary facilities, equipment
An Acme Glass Co. Service and other resources, as well as 215 W. 26th — Across from Post Office
tward was presented to Glenn the proper environment. PHONE 822 -1694 for PICK -UP
3reen, and a Cade Motor Co. The board president noted
Service Award was presented to Texas A &M "ended an era" last — -
:.ynda Copeland. month with the death of General V OTE SAT MAY 2 VOTE I
T he Outstanding I.C.T. Earl Rudder. He said it was •r
student, Tommye Morehead was a period of unprecedented
)resented a trophy by J. E. growth and change. Re. - E
Jocko) Roberts of First "I think we all know and
National Bank of Bryan. appreciate the debt we owe to '" B / Tr avis Lipscomb was honored this great leader who gave ..sot STANY
or his work with D. E. and much for the good of his • e
..C.T. students. fellowman," Wells observed.
Brazos County Commissioner, Precinct 4
I)JEA'DIS and F
Darby, Former
A &M Board
Chairman, Dies
McALLEN— Funeral services
W Eugene B. Darby, 68, for-
mer member and chairman of
,he Texas A &M University
3,ystem Board of Directors, will
)e held at 10 a.m. Wednesday
lere.
Darby died early Monday
morning following a short
llness. He was a highway
, onstruction contractor and
° esident of Pharr for 44 years.
The Rev. W. N. Clark, pastor
)f the Pharr First Baptist
Church, will officiate at the
services in the Kreidler Funeral
;hapel, McAllen. Burial will
` ollow in Roselawn Mausoleum,
McAllen.
Darby was born in Cuero. He
graduated from Texas A &M in
1925 with a B.S. degree in civil
engineering and moved to Pharr
n 1926.
Darby was a member of the
a &M Board from 1957 to 1963
tnd served as chairman from
1961 -1963.
He was a former mayor of
Pharr and chairman of the
Pharr Security State Bank
Board of Directors.
Darby is survived by his wife;
1 son, Eugene B. Darby Jr. of
Houston, a daughter, Mrs.
Burford Ingram of Pharr; one
sister, and two brothers.
Lansingville, N.Y., and resided
in Bryan 5 months.
She was a member of United
Methodist Church.
Survivors include one
daughter, Mrs. Helen Baker
Kennedy of Bryan; and four
sisters:
Mrs. Baker
Mr. Cajka
Funeral services for Mrs.
Florence H. Baker, 90, of 727
Inwood Drive, Bryan, are
pending with Wagner Funeral
Home of Ithica, N.Y.
Mrs. Baker died Monday in
a local nursing home.
Local arrangements are being
made by Hillier Funeral Home
of Bryan.
Burial will be in Lakeview
Cemetery, Ithica, N.Y.
Mrs. Baker was born in
Funeral services for Matous
Cajka, 95, of Rt. 1, Wheelock,
are scheduled at 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday at Callaway -Jones
Chapel in Bryan.
Rosary will be recited at 7:30
t o n i g h t at Callaway -Jones
Chapel.
Mr. Cajka died Monday in a
Hearne nursing home.
Burial will be in Wheelock
Cemetery under the direction of
Calloway -Jones Funeral Home.
The Rt. Rev. Tim Valenta of
St. Joseph's Catholic Church of
Bryan will officiate.
Mr. Cajka was born in
Uesely, Moravia, and moved
with his family from Vienna,
Austria to Robertson County in
1914. He was a farmer, a
member of SPJST Lodge
number 94, and a member of
St. Joseph's Catholic Church.
Survivors include cne
daughter, Mrs. Mary Marak of
Los Angeles, Calif.
Ed Skubal has been named
pallbearer.
* CLIMATIC
AIR CONDITIONER
FOR MOST MAKES & MODELS
LOW AS
$224
a'
(Includes Installation)
N & Sales Tax)
See Parts Department
Motor Co.
13 T exas Ave. Bryan, Texas
GREAT FOR PATIO, GARAGES, DRIVE-
WAYS OR PORCHES. LONG HADLE
FOR SWEEPING EASE.
COMPARE
$2.19
X129
QUALIFIED: 11 years experience as Brazos County Com-
missioner and lifetime resident of Brazos County.
EXPERIENCED taxpaying businessman in Brazos County 35
years, Director Producers Co -op. 27 years, Secretary Pro-
ducers Co -op 15 years.
PLATFORM: continue to upgrade county roads system; bus-
iness -like and economical administration of county affairs.
Will continue to devote full time to being County Commis-
sioner.
RE - ELECT
We Ae " ill" ST ShIY
YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE WILL BE APPRECIATED
Paid Pol. Ady, By W. A. "Bill" Stasny
1420 TEXAS AVENUE
COLLEGE STATION
STORE HOURS:
9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
MON. THRU SAT.
SUNDAY 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.
Price Effective
April 29,1970
W. A. "Bill" STASNY
WEDN ONLY!
CATES TYPEWRITER C
CO.
909 S. MAIN — SINCE 1959 — 822 -6000
SERVICE
Typewriter by Smith Carona
CALL CLASSIFIED, 822 -3707
Students
Honored
At Dinner
A &M Directors Ap
The Distributive Education Record O eratin Midaet
and Industrial Co-operative
Training Classes of Steph F. (Continued from Page 1) $25,000, supplement for detailed recommended the current $
Austin High School held their Electric Co., Houston, $48,362; design, low- density dormitory reinstatement fee for firs
a n n u a I Employer - Employee A i r c l e a n Corp., Carrollton, complex; $15,000, preliminary violation be doubled each tim
Banquet Monday night at Anson $18,511; and Ray Proof Corp., design, educational television f o r subsequent violation
Jones Junior High School. Norwalk, Conn., $8,540. building, and $15,000, renovation through the fifth offense, whit
Guest speaker was Dan Appropriations i n c I u d e d of Research Annex building, all would require a $32 payment
Warden of A &M Church of $92,500 for converting space in at Texas A &M. The violator's campus permi
Christ. two Corps of Cadets dormitories Contracts were awarded by ' may be revoked for remainde
The Outstanding Distributive to residence rooms; $70,000, of the semester after the sixtl
Education Student trophy was supplemental funds for detailed the board to three firms for hospitalization and life in- `isolation.
awarded to Danna Gough, design of Memorial Student
president of the D. E. Club, by Center - auditorium complex; surance for system employes, University officials noted th
Herbert Shaffer, Commercial $83,010, engineering on water effective Sept. 1. Southwestern a d d i t i o n a l parking perml
Division Chairman of the B -CS projects; $30,000, preliminary Life Insurance Co. received revenue will be used for mor
Chamber of Commerce. design, athletic dormitory; contracts for life, basic hospital parking facilities, since state
The employer of the Year 1 and major medical coverage. appropriated funds cannot b
Award was given to Don 7t * Continental Casualty Co. was used for such projects.
selected for long -term disability
Yarborough of J. rr B. o White C Brown. n. coverage and Continental In- 13 -CS Realtors
Yarborough said he
employer of Sharrn was once Challenges surance Companies for ac-
cidental death and dismem-
a D. E. student, himself. To Hear Meeks
A $25 check was presented to Face A &M b Board members voted to
.
Board
Linda Burch, the most im renew Texas A &M's student The B -CS Board of Realtor
proved senior girl, by Mrs, health service and insurance will have their monthly lur
Paula Tucker of the Altrusa cheon meeting
at noon Monda
plan with Mutual of Omaha g
Club. ays Wells Insurance Co, through the R. at Clayton's.
A plaque was presented to M. Jackson Agency in Bry y
Bryan. Ton Meeks, officer of th
Paul McCarty, most improved Texas A &M University is The board also renewed the
Texas Association of Realtor
senior boy, by Jim Wright, vice- challenged by its responsibility ROTC flight training contract
president of the B -CS Junior to meet the needs of society, with Texas Airmotive Company, will be guest speaker.
Chamber of Commerce. Clyde H. Wells, president of the of Brazos County. I
Plaques were also presented A &M Board of Directors, em- In other action, the board LADIES! SLIM
to Carla Schneider, most im- phasized Monday at a faculty- approved University Traffic YOUR FIGURE
proved junior girl, and Richard staff dinner. Committee recommendations to
Medina, most improved junior Wells said the challenges increase parking fees $5 this Rent
boy. include pollution and other I fall, to $15 for a full year for
A DECA Past Presidents z> Belt
Plaque was presented to problems of the environment, as students, faculty and staff. The
u t g o i n g president Danna w ell as stepped -up production of board also adopted a $12 rate Massage
Gough. food and fiber to meet world for nine months, $7 for a
Mitzi emands. semester or trimester and $6 $900
DECA we Sweetheart. was named "These are real problems — for the summer sessions.
Club Vy S Swe c o m p 1 e x problems," Wells Traffic violation fines were Per Me.
A n Outstanding Service pointed out. "If the great modified.
D.
Award plaque was given to e; universities of this country can't T h e University Traffic Kraft Furniture Co.
)f Coordinator Percy Pace; face up to these fundamental Committee, composed of Ph. 822 - 5019
)resident, Danna Gough; vice o s' pins were presented t problems of mankind, who can? s t u d e n t s and faculty- staff,
— -- -- --
-
p r e s i d e n t, Betty Blevins- Who will?"
secretary, Sharon Wallace; "With this faculty and the Our 22nd Year Serving Our
treasurer, Richard Medina; facilities and equipment at Wonderful Customers With .
e p o r t e r, Mark Lynch; Texas A &M today, few i))-
)hotographer, Paul McCarty; stitutions in the nation are more Professional Fur Care
igt, at Arms, Alfred Macias; competent to make em-
senior representative, Linda tributions," he added. This Is the Time to Bring Your Furs
3urch; and junior Represen- Wells assured approximately to Us for CLEANING, REPAIRS,
:ative, Janis Gough. 650 faculty -staff members the and SAFE STORAGE.
ICT Merit Awards were board of directors is challenged
)resented to Pat Morgan, and pledges to do everything CURRY FURS
3rodie Pate, Larry Conlee, Joe within its power to provide the
Uilberger and Jon Teague. necessary facilities, equipment
An Acme Glass Co. Service and other resources, as well as 215 W. 26th — Across from Post Office
tward was presented to Glenn the proper environment. PHONE 822 -1694 for PICK -UP
3reen, and a Cade Motor Co. The board president noted
Service Award was presented to Texas A &M "ended an era" last — -
:.ynda Copeland. month with the death of General V OTE SAT MAY 2 VOTE I
T he Outstanding I.C.T. Earl Rudder. He said it was •r
student, Tommye Morehead was a period of unprecedented
)resented a trophy by J. E. growth and change. Re. - E
Jocko) Roberts of First "I think we all know and
National Bank of Bryan. appreciate the debt we owe to '" B / Tr avis Lipscomb was honored this great leader who gave ..sot STANY
or his work with D. E. and much for the good of his • e
..C.T. students. fellowman," Wells observed.
Brazos County Commissioner, Precinct 4
I)JEA'DIS and F
Darby, Former
A &M Board
Chairman, Dies
McALLEN— Funeral services
W Eugene B. Darby, 68, for-
mer member and chairman of
,he Texas A &M University
3,ystem Board of Directors, will
)e held at 10 a.m. Wednesday
lere.
Darby died early Monday
morning following a short
llness. He was a highway
, onstruction contractor and
° esident of Pharr for 44 years.
The Rev. W. N. Clark, pastor
)f the Pharr First Baptist
Church, will officiate at the
services in the Kreidler Funeral
;hapel, McAllen. Burial will
` ollow in Roselawn Mausoleum,
McAllen.
Darby was born in Cuero. He
graduated from Texas A &M in
1925 with a B.S. degree in civil
engineering and moved to Pharr
n 1926.
Darby was a member of the
a &M Board from 1957 to 1963
tnd served as chairman from
1961 -1963.
He was a former mayor of
Pharr and chairman of the
Pharr Security State Bank
Board of Directors.
Darby is survived by his wife;
1 son, Eugene B. Darby Jr. of
Houston, a daughter, Mrs.
Burford Ingram of Pharr; one
sister, and two brothers.
Lansingville, N.Y., and resided
in Bryan 5 months.
She was a member of United
Methodist Church.
Survivors include one
daughter, Mrs. Helen Baker
Kennedy of Bryan; and four
sisters:
Mrs. Baker
Mr. Cajka
Funeral services for Mrs.
Florence H. Baker, 90, of 727
Inwood Drive, Bryan, are
pending with Wagner Funeral
Home of Ithica, N.Y.
Mrs. Baker died Monday in
a local nursing home.
Local arrangements are being
made by Hillier Funeral Home
of Bryan.
Burial will be in Lakeview
Cemetery, Ithica, N.Y.
Mrs. Baker was born in
Funeral services for Matous
Cajka, 95, of Rt. 1, Wheelock,
are scheduled at 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday at Callaway -Jones
Chapel in Bryan.
Rosary will be recited at 7:30
t o n i g h t at Callaway -Jones
Chapel.
Mr. Cajka died Monday in a
Hearne nursing home.
Burial will be in Wheelock
Cemetery under the direction of
Calloway -Jones Funeral Home.
The Rt. Rev. Tim Valenta of
St. Joseph's Catholic Church of
Bryan will officiate.
Mr. Cajka was born in
Uesely, Moravia, and moved
with his family from Vienna,
Austria to Robertson County in
1914. He was a farmer, a
member of SPJST Lodge
number 94, and a member of
St. Joseph's Catholic Church.
Survivors include cne
daughter, Mrs. Mary Marak of
Los Angeles, Calif.
Ed Skubal has been named
pallbearer.
* CLIMATIC
AIR CONDITIONER
FOR MOST MAKES & MODELS
LOW AS
$224
a'
(Includes Installation)
N & Sales Tax)
See Parts Department
Motor Co.
13 T exas Ave. Bryan, Texas
GREAT FOR PATIO, GARAGES, DRIVE-
WAYS OR PORCHES. LONG HADLE
FOR SWEEPING EASE.
COMPARE
$2.19
X129
QUALIFIED: 11 years experience as Brazos County Com-
missioner and lifetime resident of Brazos County.
EXPERIENCED taxpaying businessman in Brazos County 35
years, Director Producers Co -op. 27 years, Secretary Pro-
ducers Co -op 15 years.
PLATFORM: continue to upgrade county roads system; bus-
iness -like and economical administration of county affairs.
Will continue to devote full time to being County Commis-
sioner.
RE - ELECT
We Ae " ill" ST ShIY
YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE WILL BE APPRECIATED
Paid Pol. Ady, By W. A. "Bill" Stasny
1420 TEXAS AVENUE
COLLEGE STATION
STORE HOURS:
9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
MON. THRU SAT.
SUNDAY 1 P.M. TO 6 P.M.
Price Effective
April 29,1970
W. A. "Bill" STASNY
WEDN ONLY!