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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1962 Integration 020504a '," ' ~'~ ... . c..... .. . :-.: ,~ . '. Circulation Audtted and Guarant..ct ~.D"" "., . I .. .. II , I .C'""..'1.'" THE BRYAN DAILY EAGLE Home Of Texas ....,. '. .r -:, Appeal Action A&M College 87TH YEAR Serving Bryan. College Station and the Brazos Valley Since 1876 rOL. 87 No. 65 AP. HEA H.... S.rvlce BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION. TEXAS. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 18.1962 EIGHT PAGES PRICE 5 CENTlI Russ Call . For Ghina College Station School , Ordered To Integrate~\ . ~.~ .Seating UNlTED NATIONS, N. Y. IA'l J'. _ The Soviet Union today toss- ed into the General Assembly a new demand for.th,e seating of Red China. . The Sovie~ m.gve came a few \ hOU~Sl!e&1~1~4-nation as. i lembly'to e_ ts ;}.7th session. It'-pave, e wa?, for another ;i': .~. bitter fig. -Yerrth'~ China rep- f~ I,~ resentation -issues'';'''';:w h i c h has u' been beI6re"he United Nations 'n Superintendent W. T. Riedel said today he does' not for more than a decade. believe the A&M Consolidated Independent School District The Sov.-iets also submitted I 'il a1 1 b .nother new assembly item call. I. WI appe a ru ing y Federal District Judge Joe Ingrah- lng for a worM conference on I am ordering desegregation of classes in September 1963. trade. Riedel indicated that an election would not be neces- A U. S, SPOKESMAN said sary if the state will continue state funds to aid in operat- the United States has no inten. ing schools of the district. tion of opposing a new vote this Judge Ingraham ruled Monday that desegregating is ., year. He said t>e U.S. delega. . ". \ to start in the first grade next year and advance one grade < lion expects the opposition to '. ' each year thereafter through 1974, with all grades not ~ ~ Red China will be as strong or ,'I even stronger than a year ago. SENATORS RUSK POSE OJ..... having been desegregated to be The opening session was lim-' , ,mtegrated In 1975. 1ted to the formalities of elEX:t. Riedel said this morning he V t H ld . Sen. John Sparkman, D.Ala., points to a map of the Caribbean area as i, talks with has heard nothing official from 0 ers 0 : ing a new assembly president S R h d R 11 D G t d S t f Sf' d ah f th " and approving the admission of en: ic ar usse, - a.. cen e.r, an e.cre ary 0 tate Dean Rusk"~TJ\.ey posed I Ju ge Ingr. ~m or rom e four new countries, but eVen dunng a recess of the Senate ForeIgn Rela tIOns Committee and the Sen:ate ArmedL school dlSU"lCt 5 attorney, Joe K F d on the presidential con t est Services Commttee. The committees are drafting a resolution on the SO~jet-aided R~~nolds of Houston. , ey to eu there was an East.West split. buildup in Cuba. (AP Wirephoto) . 01,:' WE ARE HOPING we. don t ~: \Ir'" have to hold an electIOn. As we Western - backed Muhammad ...- I p. . Z f II Kh . ';'{;'. ~ .~ see it, the results of such an n runanes a ru a an. veteran Pakis- T W ." 'election would be of no value in tani diplomat, appeared sure to th S tto'l 'Ie t the face of federal require- ;-;~~l.o~~b~;;a:o~v~~t~~~~tl~~ iros ea er a ~,.,,:..~;.~. _.1 e, ments. In other cases of this BOSTON lA'I - Massachusetts k f C I M I I k . ~ type. Houston for instance. the voters decided today whether se era 0 eyon. a a ase era, results of local elections to com. hdowevder'f rtefusedd .tod. actkndowhl. M k S f I O'l~" ~ · t~ ply with state laws were not :ng~i~:[ a~:t~e~ e ~g:i~ ~~ e ge e ea an 10 lca e e considered. Fed e r ~ 1 require- >' :::~,E2t:n:t:~~.::-~ a es . u c ce ss u ..j :)); :::::.:::: w:~=,,....,..::; ~?:::.:'7" 0:;: E:;::;; ;;;: h k h CAPE CANAVERAL, FI ,a h d d . . :~. ~. commented. t t e wee w en U. S. Ambassa- a. lal se e ule orbital flight of U.S. orbits. hIs. caps.u ~w~ll land In "I don't know right now what a e. dor Adlai E. Stevenson and So~ - The sixth in a series of Tiros astronat:t Walter M. Schirra Jr. ~e Atlan~lc. COlilfi f~n of ~~. ou,r next step will be. Probably estEbdwroatbrderMof' PrKeensl~deednYt' J~~~n{.: viet Foreign Minister And rei weather satellites rocketed into SEA CONDITIONS in the At. fI.ve ?T SIX orb . .:~yotl1d ~:rop we wiU talk with Attorney Ge.n- Gromyko deliver their main orbit today and its camera eyes lantic and Pacific recovery hIm, In the ,~ac; IC....'. ..~ eia! W_ill Wilson and Comnlls. Kennedy, is running for the pplicy declarations. went on immediate alert for zones will be watched closely TIros 6 ongu1al\- ~as~. t;d., kioner. of Education Dr. J. W. Democratic nomination in to. MOSCOW dispatches confirm- hurricanes, typhoons and other as Schirra's Sept. 28 launching uled for launc~l ' r.jIn, _,'~,.n : eHi.. n., Edgar." .Riedel continued. day's Massachusetts party pri. ,ed what Western diplomats had storms around the globe. date nears. Hurricanes and ty.. ber but a' i:t ~r "0 I maries. .'.,. cted _ that Gromyko will The electronic weatberman phoons are' definite tbreats in . w s .~~r'.~",,", . :'N.. Tj1e election of \.Iich Riede George Cabot Lodge seeks the t.ll!J . b' . shot away from Cape Canaveral both months to .l'~ov.an ",...m ,Ollnoke.. is .. matte, of .state la~, -Repubi,'can nomination. He ,is a . ose no .~E e In rIngmg up the oceans this time of year. case the 8lli~:~ _;t.,~{l.W:tll iJndet .current 'St-ate laws, dIS- ~~~',ct~~~~nth:dt;~e~:i~~ ~~~~~~=i~' ~~~~ a ~~~~tst:;~ ea~~Sc~i~ra ~~e~r~~ohto~at::r~ ~~:~~a ~s_e .~;. . ~ff~.;?4' :~~~!f~~n,"~pf{\i~s1g,.e.gate and ~~'!'l J;cen~afa~~t ~~e, ;o~ ~.;~tates'ji&l)la1Jni""g an aVack. . hours ;.liller the Natiomil Aero. ," ,y,e~. , .."",,.-'.1.. o9l!lmue <:~:,,!.:.<;';!~e s!:ate .funds ,1947 until John F.. Kennedy t. ,~. e So~iets also.-'a~:.,t_xpected ,nautics....and & ~ce' dministra-' . :t ~., __;' '="C~. ~ J ,]11il:~P!i1&t\9f.~he _Y..~9~~rs won,itjn~1952. 'l\'."" c ~'&fb))S:bi1:~nu;<liJln'ali"'oiince'dllie r~ ite-"(."asc~/ . ..l'l1..-" ..q~.... ~~~~~:,i~1w, .c:~~I(NJiPY ....I'fI),tbllg~;;~.j).. "111'/ . .". . c,," 0'" .t 4ii"" ,,"~:r.al.,... ,. ..- R e. .,. ,...h.,e.l"t!r~d~.';n"eeiint.ifs~" :~';1l!1lU" ~ :-.. _ ~ r ~...~. ;~./I~,.hl~ ~_, '_ .. . 1 ,P..?Jj~ ;\p.1"e'. . .~ I' '.... I i ')1 .l","~ tJr;,... _ , tr i~~J . ~. l ., -., '1 --'.!:''>m, t ~~.' :'~ 4l . . an S :r~~ ti-,~:~ li . ~j>~~~t~t.Q~~ ~ ~i~e ,~en who were' their ~Pr i-;~ ~ ;S!~don eoUi- ~1J~cessU!r"'~!lt~!1I.te 1"" chmg. '. " .~ "'R:"" ;.i . t a ....g~_$C O?I..1SC1C ,a matyrlvais: "nal ihdicated it will as- fOl"the-92-foot Delta V~l1cle, the TORI ~. . .' 'f'l;_~ ~l,;, d~ne i'il,~lr;,pa:t -10. c:omplymg Edward J. McCormack .Jr., ,,;';?.....: ~{.: . ~I ~l<<e )So.viet Union for refus: nation's most reliable. ~ pac e 0 ppO s. e o. ~ 0:- I, I ' ~Itl'i. "sta:~'laws spd that s~te state attorney general and 8 (: < . gj,tc pay its U.N. assessments booster. It also made SlX SUC. ~ . .- 1 IJ~" 8ld wQufd' be contmued despIte nephew of Speaker of the House -.:f9r{ the Congo operation and cessful launches in as many #. the action taken by the federal John W. McCormack of Massa. 'w~~-~'press for assembly action tries for the Tiros satellite pro- , SYRACUSE, N.Y. t.4'I _ New The Republicans will rendn. government. chusetts, opposes Kennedy. t~i~Back up the advisory opinion gram. York Democrats, long racked nate Rockefeller, U. S. Sen:~JI- AN ELECTION would 1"e- Rep. Laurence Curtis, R-Mass., of the World Court holding such NASA announced more than by international feuds, chose cob K. Javits and other ma a- (See INT.EGRATI0N Page 8) is running against Lodge. Cur. assessments are binding. five hours after launch that the Robert M. Morgenthau at a cha~ bers of the Rockt"'feller tea ,r-m- tis' congressional district was . WHILE THE l:\erlin question satellite was performing as otic state convention early to-h., 'U ni led Fund eliminated in this year's reap- ~. . was expected to get a full airw planned and had taken its first day as their gubernatorial nom. THE DEMOCRA.TS, fa c. d portionment, w h i c h cut the . -:l ing in the main policy state~ set of cloud cover pictures as it inee. with an uphill fight against;~ Drive Slated delegation from 14 to 12, \.iments. there was no evidence whirled over the Mediterranean Morgenthau, former U. S. at. governor in the seven weeks '(' e The vote is expected to set a >. that the issue would be put on Sea and North Africa on the torney in New York City and maining before the election, 1 {ed October 15-25 record, topping 1 million. . .the assembly agenda for action. second orbit. the soft-spoken son of a famous been weakened severely b fa Polls open at various hours . ~..~,~cting Secretary G e n e r al U The pictures were stored on Democrat, was nominated unan. bitter party fight over so~cal ~ ~ The Greater Bryan United and close at 6 or 7 p.m. 4~lirhant told a news conference magnetic tapes and relayed to imously over four rivals on the bossism after the 1958 state c e Fund drive will be held Oct. 15~ Age and experience have been r ~M 0 n day n e i the r Premier earth as Tiros 6 passed over a second ballot to oppose Republi. vention. n- 25 and will be handled entirely prime issues in both contests. '.'Khrushchev nor President Ken- ground station at Point Mugu, can Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller The split that developed c n~ by local persons, Ford D. AI- KENNEDY TURNED 30, min. , nedy has indicated any desire Calif. in the' November election. tributed significantly to Roc britton Jr., president, announc- imum age for a senator, last to bring the problem to the llThe pictures were of excel. Veteran Democrats called the feller's election to his first te ed today. Feb. 22 just before he announc. United Nations at this time. lent quality," NASA spokes. strife~torn convention session Today's battle was essential Albritton said it was decided ed his candidacy for the seat his +" ~Both Western and Iron Cur- man reported. fie said both one of the most unruly in the a power struggle between Ne ~ at a board of directors meeting brother vacated on winning the "':t '.. j:~in sources continued to specu- television cameras aboard the party's history. It threatened York City leaders, Morgenth u last night that the drive will be presidency in 1960. ~: . ~;;laje 0 n the possibility t hat. vehicle were working. to aggravate wounds still un- supporters, and those upstat conducted witho.... outside help. McCormack, 39, is a graduate (", Khrushchev might come to New The satellite also could pre- healed after the party's divisive who were not enthusiastic abo i "V'ith the type of leadership of the U,S. Navy Academy. He (See CHINA Page 8) diet the weather for next week's convention four years ago. his candidacy. that is on the board and with has stressed his record of hold. Despite the support of the THE STRIFE had serious i community backing, there is ing public office for the last 10 most powerfu} Democratic lead. plications :{or President Ken no doubt we can make our goal years. ers in the state, Morgenthau, a nedy and the national Demo withou,1 outside help," Albritton On the Republican side, Cur. newcomer to politics, fell seven cratic party. said. tis, 69, cited his experience in votes short of winning the nom- New York, with its large ur A United Fund office will be city, state and national office as ination on the first ballot. ban population and key elector~ opened next week at 2601 Tex- a contrast to Lodge's first try al votes was a maj'or factor " . as Ave" the drive president al.. for public office. Lodge is 35. A SHOUTING, brawling tu. H d h Th" d Lcd f d f the President's election ,'n 1960' so announced. e adde t at e n.enne y. ge eu or mult followed during which his b d t d f be th Se t t b k to and could be aga,'n I'n 1964. H"'" u ge nee s 0 mem r agen.. e na e sea goes ac backers sought to start' an im- ...-: - d th I U I ill 1916 h Lod' t d carried the state I'n 1960. C.Les an e tota F goa w w en ge s grea .gran - mediate second call of the roU b e announced soon. (See PRIMARIES Page 6) w h i 1 e his opponents for the nomination tried in vain to re. cess the convention until later .today. His nomination was mad e unanimous on the se<;ond ballot_, ~.. when it oecame clear he ~adl ~ picked up more than enough votes to win. Morgenthau, 43. son of Henry Morgenthau Jr., secretary of the Treasury under Pre sid e n t. Franklin D. Roosevelt, had the support of May 0 r Robert F. Wagner of New Y 0 r k City, former Gov. Herbert Lehman and Rep. Charles A. Buckley, veteran Bronx leader. Riedel Doubts .I' · ~\ " "~ ,,' I -. " CANDIDATE AND '''WIFE , " ..' ... pemocrat John Connally and his wife Nellie w;'}' , from their car'during a downtown parade in El ~6 Connally, the Democratic candidate for gov:ernor~' livered the keynote address at the convention . (AP Wirephoto) Officials NEVV ASTRONAUTS These are the nine men named'l b NASA t b f h fl' Standing, left to ril(ht, Elliott 1, y . 0 ecome part 0 ~ ~ test- Ight personnel. James A 1,0 II J USN' C ,VI. See, Cap. James A. McDIVItt, USAF; Lt. Cmdr. Stafford US;;, F;~nt, left to ajPt. E.dward H. White II, USAF: and C~pt. Thomas P, m USAF' N il A. Ann tr ",rIght. Lt. Charles Conrad Jr., USN; Major Frank Ber- an, ,e son,;.; and Lt. emd!'. John W. Young, (AP Wirephoto). t'>~~ ....'. ~ ~ ~ ~I . f.: . -i1.'~, HOUSTON 1.1'1 - The man' officer for Fighter Squa'a~5a who directs the nation's man- at Miramar. \~+'-'... ned spacecraft flights says sl.\ch Relatives ot the ne~~:~';~ famous names as John H. Glenn nauts expressed hapPlO.e~s~.at Jr. may not be amo~g the as. the announcement. Sot!t~.!"~i~ tronauts, riding the fIrSt U. S, the men had not told thep)J3!t..~.. rocket to the moon. had been selected. 0the~isai~ Dr. Robert R. Gilruth, direc- the secret had been a h<liXt.~~.. tor of the Manned Spacecraft to keep since last T~aiY. Center here. said age may be (See SPACEMEN Page -a;. working against Glenn and the other six original astronauts when Project Apollo's moon shots begin six to eight years from now. In introducing nine new as. D* S d" tronauts on Monday, Gilruth Ie as pee v said: "Some of the orginial sev. J, en are highly motivated to make Ed. :1# the moonshot, but the age fac- , xo US' BegIri~' tor very well could make It Il.~ difficult for them." t;," Ages of the new group range HOLLANDiA, West 'li.~'" from 31 to 35, compared to 35 Guinae tNl-The Dutch are pu114 ~ 41 for the 1959 group. Glenn ing out as fast as they can fr.am IS the oldest. West New Guinea - their iait GILRUTH SAID. the 253 ~ol. colonial territory of the 0llC8 u,nteers who s~brmtted applIca- great Dutch East Indies, t~ons last spnng ~ade It ~s- There is no panic, but they SIble to select n;~e, excen~nt leave with a mixture of emot- men. T~<! are CIVlhans WIth ions _ deep regret, sadness, te- Navy trammg. lief and some bitterness. . The new astronauts - all test As one Dutch" trader said: pllot~re: e'We know we had to leave . Nell A. Armstrong, 3~, a na- sooner or later. But it is: a1. tlve of Wapakoneta. OhIO, a test ways sad when y u a e actuaily pilot, of the XI5, and ~n aero. faced with leavin .- ~ur role in" nautIcal n;search engmeer, at this part of the .-ld has been Edw8!ds AIr Force Base, Call:. played out. ~ e reached Maj. Fran~ Borman, 34, Air the end of ' .l! Force, a natIve of Gary, Ind., ,~ .: and an instructor at the Aero- THIS TRQPICAL territor~ space Research Pilot School at astride the equator with most Edwards. of its 161,000 square miles CQn- Ll Charles Conrad Jr., 32, sisting of dense jungles, coastal Navy, a native. of Phi1ad~lphia swamps and undeveloped lands, and safety officer for FIghter will be transferred from the ~ Squadron 142. Miramar Air Sta. Netherlands to a U.N. admini...).~ tion, Calif. stration for a seven month in;-' Lt. Cmdr. James A. Lovell terim period Oct. 1. Next May Jr., 34, Navy, a native of Cleve- 1 Indonesia takes over. land, and a flight instructor at Native Papuans in the central the Oceana Naval Air Station, highlands of this California- Va. sized territory still live in the Capt. James A. McDivitt, 33, stone age and have little or no Air Force. of Jackson, Mich" contact with white men. and an experimental flight test Since the Dutch - Indonesian officer at Edwards. cease-fire on Aug. 15, the de- ELLIOTT M, SEE Jr., 35, a gone. It is the end ot an era." native of Dallas, Tex., and an parture of women anq. ch!ldren experimental test pilot for the has been accelerated. Many de. General Electric -Co. at Ed. pendents of Dutch officials be. w~.~;~ Thomas P. Stafford. 32. (See DUTCH Page 6) Air Force, a native of Weather- ford, Okla., and chief of the performance branch of the ex- perimental test pilot division at Edwards. Capt. Edward H. White II, 32, Air Force, a native of San An. tonio, Tex., and an experimenw tal test pilot with the Aeronau. tical System Division at Wright- Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. Lt. Cmdr. John W. Young, 31, Navy, a native of San Fran- cisco, Calif., and maintenance Dutch Drea~s (NEWS RouNDUP ~,. House Suggests Foreign Aid Slash L* Conventional FHA and Title I lows at Bryan Building and Loan Association. -<Adv') WASHINGTON 1.1'1 - A Sen. ate House conference has breath. ed new life into a $2.35-bilIion college education aid bill after some of its strongest partisans had abandoned hope for it. The conferees reached their agreement late Monday on the only piece of legislation in Pres- ident Kennedy's broad educa. tion p~ckage given any chance of reaching his desk before Congress quits. The final compromise does not contain all the President asked, but it was closer to the Senate bill he endorsed than to the more limited House meas- ure. The conferees still must meet Wednesday to sign their report. Sen. Wayne Morse, D.Ore., and Rep. Edith Green, D.Ore., head. ing the respective delegations, said this was just a fonnaIity. There was a possibility of fioor fights on the compromise, particularly in the House. But Mrs. Green said she was confi- dent of bipartisan support in the showdown. The House con~ ferees approved the final pro-- (See ROUNDUP Page 8) HE REPORTEDLY had the backing also of the Kennedy administration, but pub 1 i c I y Washington Democrats k e p t hands off the bitter state strug. gle. Republicans, whose state con- vention opened in quiet har- mony in Buffalo today, quickly capitalized on the Democrats strife, Walter J. Mahoney, Republi. can leader of the state Senate, charged in his prepared key. note address that delegates to the Democratic convention had been "black-jacked" into choos- ing Morgenthau by alleged par. ty bosses. He called Wagner the "apostle of the new Bossism" and said Morgenthau was the "head of a phantom ticket which the peo- ple of the state will little note nor long remember." . WASHINGTON 1.1'1 -A slash of about 19. per cent.-$I,376,' OOo-in new"funds for the for- eign aid program was recom- mended today by the House Ap- I-' .~.~;tPropdations C~mittee. _" .~ft 1f sustain~Jli\.. the House lat- ^ er this we~,the committee's JJ action wonJd ,..gjy~"the aid pro- gram $5,956,652.0'00 in additional money for the current fiscal year instead of the $7.335,029., 000 requested by President Ken. nedy. The President had asked for about $211 million more than ~ngress had authorized in sep. ar,,te legislation prescribing fi. nancial limitations on the pro. gram for military and econom~ ic help to friendly naliona The committee . imposed cut was about as deep as Rep. Otto E. Passman, D-La., predicted several weeks ago. Passman, chairman of a subcommittee that drafted the aid mOl1ey bill after several months of hear- ings, set a reduction goal of close tn $1.5 bill at that time. Even if Congress provided no new money this year, the com- mittee said in a fonnal report ~mpanying the bill. there WOuld be enough money left over from prior appropriations to finance the program for about 25 months. Most of the carryover, however, has been earmarked or obligated . . . Aid OKed . .\, ~ I: \\'EATHER ~ ~-. The forecast for the Bryall" College Slation area is clear to padly cloudy today and Wednesday. Low tonight 68 10 '76, high Wednesday 92 10 100. The high yesterday was 89, the low t.~is morning was 73, and the noon temperahlr. was 86. , \ :, .., -- ~.,... I ".... ..-. . . . - ~~. ~~.~''; . f:',~ I': .~ ";='.' ,~ .., lIGHT THE 8RYAN DAILY EAGLE, 8RYAN.C.s., TEXAS TUESDAY. SEPT, 18; 1981 STUDENTS EAGER .. l , - . t HAL BOYLE'S .'..<1:.. .~ . .~olpou""i ., ., :. ~ .:a::.~. ,NEv{5X0RK IA'l - One of the greatipleasures of middle age is the dill<:!'very that your memory lB slippihg. From then on you can make rt,.our;life even more enjoyable if #au pretend it has slipped even iu'rilfer than it has, just as eld. ,.er]y. pe!>p.te,~o,tten pretend they :"~.harq~..i"8rwg.th.an they _ ~ '~1b;,~ _..~:~.: *' ~... n, '" :r~n~>ciillhemember just wh,a't 'y _ u W' iit t-o '- 'jUst as - old frct") k ,'! ear only what they If;hQO!}e''to~;'" LOg OF MEMORY isn't so mu.,h~ matter of physical aging I.i,'in:;most men as it is a selective . ~'.s>fD1,rof self~defense. It is af- ~tc~d,by': the kind of jobs they ~Ne, ,,!,~'. hdOW long they have uceJ:1 marne . I!il. ehe1al It might be said JIlat.' ;,more people there are ~...who.' 1 they have 8 right to teU ~ what to do, the earlier ~oUr memory begins to show . ijgns....astfjfailing. It/IS' only by forgetting some oftt/ieir insistent demands that Ywod can remem ber to do some of the 'things you want to get done YOQ.I'Self. This is what is known :~8S protective, or self... d~,f~nsive, loss of memory. ,SGME PEOPLE take an in. ol:~ te pride in their mem... o~ They can remember all tfi.~~past automobile licenses, aJt1ltan recall the name and roo"m. number of every hotel th~Y; stayed in. What is worse, th~ like to show off this useless skill at cocktail parties after their second drink. . Sue h parrot-type memories are mOl'e of a nuisance than a blessing, and hardly show intel- ligence of a very high order. They result in " mind stuffed with nonessential lumber that Sh-auld bore one's self and cer.. ~.. .~arnly is bound to bore others. MANY MIDDLE.aged people worry at anYl sign of loss of flemory. The i1I;uth is loss of memory is normal, healthy, and essential. It begins at birth and con- tinues inexorably until death. Every day, probably every hour, awakP or a 51 e e p, our crowded brains '" forget some.. ~ing they no longer need to ,;J(eep - and if they didn't it is hard to see how we could go on living. How impossible life would be to the average man if he re- membered every wrong or fool... ish thing he had done in his long journey! Such a mountain ~ of accumulated guilt and regret ,. would break the stoutest back. He would have time only for re- morse; none left for accomplish- ment. THE WISE MAN of middle age feels a quiet sense of elation at the discovery his me m 0 r y isn't quite what it used to be. What if he no longer can work a problem in high school algebra? What if he does keep meeting people whose faces are familiar but whose names he can no longer recall? What if he did forget his wife's 49th birth. day? Maybe he no longer needs al_ gebra, the names of those for- gotten faces no longer are im. portant to him, and his wife would rather he remembered their 25th wedding anniversary than her 49th birthday. " .t;.... t .,. 'f I' ,~ . . \1~ .~ ':''Y "'r-I master in St. Mark's School, an Anglo - Chinese grant - in-aid school in the colony. A "middle" school such as St. Mark's COr- responds to the American high school. Locke taught courses in English, history and civics to ninth, tenth and eleventh grad. ern. Locke enjoyed both the teach. ing and the way of life in Hong King, he said. THE LOCALE is a pocket of land - smaner than some Tex- as ranches - surrounded by the Chinese Communists. Despite this nearness to the Red Chi- nese, Locke found life in Hong Kong much like that of any large cosmopolitan city. Per- haps the major difference is that a variety of languages are heard on the city streets. The Lockes enjoyed the varied cul. tural aspects of the city and at. tended performances by top mu- sical artists from Great Britain and so forth. The small Crown Colony is one of the most densely popu- lated areas in the world, and the crowded conditions are the one thing Locke doesn't like. Among the inhabitants are several thousand American cit. izens. The Association of For. mer Students of Texas A&M lists three Aggies as residents of Hong Kong. The school in which Locke taught housed approximately 700 students, Chinese residents of the colony, and a faculty of 35. The physical plant was sim- ilar to that of a school in the West. The students no longer bowed to the teacher, as in ele- mentary schools, but they rose when the teacher entered the room. THE BEHAVIOR of the stu. dents was one of the two things most impressive to Locke. The other was the motivation or "drive" of the students. The economic and other pres- sures resulting trom the crowd- ed conditions in Hong Kong are reflected in the attitudes of the pupils. "The students are under ter- rific pressures to succeed II Locke said. "There is a ve~ close relationship between pass- ing the examinations and get- ting the job." Stuaents complet- ing elementary school must pass an examination to qualify for ~'middle" school. !)lose com- r pleting advanced classes must pass an examination given,by the government, to receive a diplo. ma. Failure blocks further edu- cation and limits the young per... son's job opportunities. "Many" students at the school where Locke taught now are studying at COlleges and univer- sities. Australia attracts many especially girls who plan nurs~ ing careers. A fonner student of Locke's is attending the Uni- versity of Houston and has won scholastic recognition each se- mester. "Very, very few" stu: dents from the Crown Colony fail th~ir work in COlleges and universities in this nation, Locke said. . THE ECONOMIC pressures plus the limited land available in the colony sharply limits the ~emand for professional people In some ways. An example is the physics teacher in the school in which Locke taught. This teacher held a master's degree from one of the top technical colleges in the world. Engineers especially have limited oppor- tunities in Hong Kong. St. Mark's School was estab- lished by the Anglican Church which maintains control. Th~ goernment of Hong Kong grant- ed certain funds and exercised controls through teacher certi- fication and the fact that a sin- gle, comprehensive, examination is given annually to the gradu- ates of all of the "middle" schools 1n the colony. AIl of the schools, govern. China <Continued from Page 1) York after the U.S. elections to take part in the assembly de- bates. This would afford an op- portunity for a meeting with Kennedy. Thant touched briefly on the Cuban issue, deClaring he be. lieved the situation would not develop into a major crisis. On the question of his own tuture, Thant con ti n u e d to hedge. He declined again to say whether he would seek a full five-year term as secretary gen- eral. . Carver Mothers Elect Officers Mrs. Estella Rhone was elect- ed chairman of the Carver Ele- mentary School Room Mothers Club last night at the group's first meeting of the year. Others elected were Mrs. Lil. ian Young, co-chairman; Mrs. Rosa Mae Carr, secretary; Mrs. Susan Nivlet, assistant secre- tary; Mrs. Alma Grays, chaplin, and Mrs. Elizabeth Green, as. sistant chaplin. Mrs. Frances Collins and Mrs. Alberta Carter were named to the program committee. ment or private, charg~ tuition. St. Mark's charged approxi- mately $8 a month for the ten and a half month school year. Government sch"ools charged less. Students also had to wear uniforms in all of the schools and purchase their own books. The costs to the family are relatively as great as they are in the U. S. to send a son or daughter to college, he said. Many schools do remit tuition in hardship cases and offer some scholarships. ABOUT TV Cynthia Says. . . By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Radlo.TV Writer NEW YORK IA'l - "It's a Man's World" is the title -and a throughly misleading one - of a gentle, preceptive series about three young men and a boy which had its premiere Monday night on NBC. Peter Tewksbury, who creat- ed and produced the series, said recently he had a hard time ex- plaining to his front office that he wanted to do his opening show about a 14-year-old boy who loses about $32. As a mailer of fact, the plot is still impossible to explain. but the boy did lose $32 and its return serves to introduce the young stars in a happy, im- aginative series about growing up. THE FOUR LADS, ea~ a different type, are engaging and interesting actors. The show is a welcome change from idiot- inhabited situation comedies, psychotic murders and cowtown shootouts. The program, one sunnises, will concern the problems of or- phaned brothers, one of them working his way through a small Midwestern college, a fel- low student - richer and more carefree - and finally, a Sou- Ih~rn country boy, all. living together in a shabby houseboat. It rd'oesn't sound like m'ucli, but it's fresh and, if you'I! pardon the expresSion. heartwarming. "Saints and Sinners," anot- her new NBC series bowing in Monday night. promises to be a fast~moving, taut action ser- ies built on a newspaper city room foundation. The first episode concerned the abduction for ransom of a businessman. The drama was not so much the hunt as finding the person who tipped off a riv- al paper about the story, there- by endangering the kidnaped man's life. OF COURSE, there were the time-honored newspaper char- acters so beloved by fiction writers - the brash. talented young star reporter - weU pla- yed by Nick Adams - the gruff but kindly editor, the colorful photographer, the broken down rewrite man and, nateh,. the glamorous lady' foreign corres- pondent. But so far, not a dirty trent:h coat has loomd and, true to the producer's promise, nobOdy yel- led "scoop." They did Utear up a page," but it wasn't the front one, only the classified ad sec- tion. Anyway, the first show was interesting and exciting. Then, too, "Stump the Stars," iC8me to CBS. That is, the game of charades returned, played by two widely extroverted celebri- ty teams of four. The show used to be called "Pantomime Qujz ,. but now it has a fancier 5;1. bigger star names and a new troop leader. It's the same noi- sy. confused game. Pat Harrington was in charge and either because of the gen- ~.ral confusion or opening night J1tters let a few things _ . like the score - get mixed up. The games didn't go so well either largely because guest star Jer~ ry Lewis was so busy stunting for attention he wouldn't play the game. The show never was II real belIringer and the slight chan- ges haven't changed it a bit. Its debut, however, pulled me away from watching NBC's special feature on the America's Cup race, a delightful, well-or- ganized feature pegged to the current 12-meter yacht races. An NBC crew had taken pict- ures of the challenger, the Aus. tralian yacht Gretel, before is was shipped to this country, and showed the great interest in the race down under. Then it sketched some of the history of the cup and the challengers ov- er the years and that's where I dialed away, reluctantly. Recommended tonight: -'Kee. fe Brasselle's Variety Gardens," musical special, with Liberace and Beatrice Kay. CBS, 10.11, . Integration <Continued from Page 1) quire a petition signed by at least 20 per cent of the qualified voters in the A&M School Dis. trict. Riedel said the r u 1 i n g by Judge Ingraham earn e as no shock to him. A ruling had been anticipated toward the end of September or early in October. The suit was filed against Rie- del and members of the board of trustees in August, 1961, on behalf of 33 Negro students. FIGURES released by Riedel show that 300 Negrd' students are enrolled at Lincoln School. Of that total 22 are first grad. ers. Lincoln includes grades one through twelve. A&M Consoli- dated white schools show an enrollment of 1,500. Judge Ingraham's order re- strains and enjoins the A&M school district and various offi- cials from requiring segregation of the races in any school under their supervision and ruled that, beginning next S e p tern b e r, "Each student entering the first grade may at his option attend the forn:..erly all white or form. erly all Negro school within the boundaries in which the student may live." The judge further ruled that sections of the Texas Constitu- tion and certain provisions of the civil statutes of the state are unconstitutional in so far as they "require segregation of the races of the public schools oper- ated by the defendants." Representing the plaintiffs were Aloysius M. Wickliff of Houston and W. J. Durham and Thurgood Marshall of Dallas. Dutch <Continued from Page 1) gan leaving more than a year ago, when the Indonesians threatened militarv action to re- cover what they claimed to be part of the former Dutch East' Indies. OF A TOTAL Dutch popula. tion of about 16,000, only 400 to 500 will remain after Oct. 1. Most of these are Dutch official.i who plan to be home by Christ. mas. Although the United Nations is offering double salaries to the Dutch who remain during the transition, only a handful are willing to stay. Airports at Biak and Hol. landia are packed with women and children ~oarding regular and chartered airline flights to Holland and some to Australia. Many homes are for sale but there are no buyers. The Dutch are shipping their autos home because there are no takers. ' BUSINESS in! H6llandia has been almost paraJyled~siifce die ceasefire agreement. Banks have stopped~ credits. Business is limited to cash sales. Shops are running au'! of goods and shelves are getting bare. All the building projects have been halted. Some Dutch'" are bitter at the United States for pressuring them into a surrender of the territory. They also find the short transition period under the United Nations a huge joke. "WE DID NOT expect trans- fer to come so soon," said the representative of a large Am- sterdam firm. We had hoped for one to two years." A Dutch old timer sadly shook DEATHS and FUNERALS John Edwin his ead as we drove through hilly Hollandia. .. e promised Papuans inde- pen ence. But any hope of in- dep. ndence,in the near future is Ph ne T 11: 2.3707 for Classified John Ed win, 70, died Monday afternoon in a local hospital. Mr. Edwin, a retired mining engineer of Donna, had been visiting with his son, John R. E':i..win, 707 Cherry, College Sta- t:'~"l, a veterinary student at 'I .:as A&M College. Born April 26, 1892, in Chica. go, Ill., and was a graduate of t1: ~ University of Minnesota wHere he received his engineer of mines degree in 1920 and his m- ter degree in 1922. He is a m ber of the Presbyterian clf ch, American Legion, the A\ ~rican Institute of Mining Eti . eers, and veteran of Wid War I. ..,..,.. turvivors ~~~jdes:. his son of Colege Stahon,-~' are two sons, Ch les Hal Edwih tf. Wallace, Idaho, and Ge<?Ilge Robert Ed~ wid of AnaheiM:'," Calif.; one sif:~r, Mrs. '-EQ:il1mOetersen of Rutbton, Minii~amh~.two.,:grand- chi~en. . ' .;.).-., FLneral servtce'y,rere held at 3 p;m. Tuesday at"F-orest Park in lfouston with.1J,eY. Frank Mc- Elrq.y, pastor of- First Presby- teri~ Church, YOkuni, officiat- ing.' Burial was in family plot und~r direction of Callaway- J on,,"s Funeral Home. dub Members G;o to Tyler R~ta Thompon,:: Boris Collier, and ~ Ethel Masco, members of the ~egro '4-H Club, accompan- ied 'by Mrs;I,Eiizabeth Banks, ad- Ult~~ader, attended the State 4-H avorite Foo<f Show whi~ met in Tyler Saturday. Mi Thompson won a blue rib in the junior division of the eat group, while Miss Col. lier [on a blue ribbon in the senio division of the meat grou . Mi _s Collier was also the mo- deraif>r for the panel discus- sion j~n "What the 4-H food progr~ means to me." NEW~~~~~~on w.. unchanle~O~~ 40 cents a baJe lower at noontotoday. Oc(ober 33.56, Decem- b,,, 33~' -March.. 34.23. AUS N (AP\:L~oultry: South Taxaa..~' teady:, l.?l ~a8t';I:exa& steady, s..~ppliC! ~.:,{lq~lJ~~t,rt:-gP2Ct dein~nd. _slaugh e~..~tOOO~~1""larm..16.4l16'.9.,. "~F "- ....,':~~. :j'XP); i:-: 'Cattle \~,~:. \i~~!.-i::tI~'_ ~~~,...~6.00~18.o,g; goo~'1 ~' lves,~ ~24.00.'-'24.5O. standard 22;'00;,.-. ocCandL_..ci!"Ol:c"if.reeders ;'):ea!l- 101_",st ~rs:t.-;25:00, choice steer - calves 32.00. "oocf,~;arld. ~cholce 24.00-29.00. medu~ I la~~: "gOOd., ~ heifer calves 22.()().23oo. . ,,'I ~, Sbee 2,000,:, ,.good and choice spring lambs 18.~20.00. shorn 18.00~ 19.00; 'ood and choice yearlings 16.00. utility 2.00, ewes 5.50.6.50; good and choice wooled. spring feeder Jambs 11.()()"1 :.00. ~. . Hog 500: ~~p 18.50-19.00. Save Our Gold Stamps Three Aggies To Be Guests Of A&M Dub Three young men who are be. ing sponsored at Texas A&M College by the Brazos County A&M Club will be guests at the Wednesday meeting of the Ag- gie club. The three Brazos County boys are Jack Keeling, Buddy Fran- ces and Pete Catalina. Dues paid by Aggie Club members goes to support the scholarship pro g ram. P. L. (Pinky) Downs, good Samari- tan of the club, pointed out that a membership drive is now un- derway but is "far short of the goal of 600 . . ." Featured speaker at the '1 p.m. meeting in the clubhouse on Ehlinger Drive will be A&M Coach Hank Foldberg. Dinner will be served. Roundup <Continued from Page 1) duct 6 to 1. The Senate group voted 7 to 2 for it. . . . Treaty Looms MOSCOW IA'l - The Soviet govermnent declared today that because of alleged collusion be- tween France and West Germa- ny there is an imperative need for a German peace treaty that would solve the Berlin prob- lem. A government statement dis. tributed by the official Soviet news agency Tass said the ur- gency of the situation has been heightened by French President Charles de Gaulle's recent visit with West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. The statement said that it the Western powers do not agree to a German peace treaty, the S0- viet Union will sign a separate treaty with East Germany. No date was mentioned. Commenting on De Gaulle's visit to Germany, the statement charged the French leader is setting up a Bonn-Paris axis with the aim of taking control of Europe's forces. . . . Naval Base Eyed GUANTANAMO N A V A L BASE, Cuba (AI) - Sources in contact with the Cuban under- ground say information they have received may indicate a move by the Castro government to build a naval base on Cuba's north coast. These sources said that tor several weeks thE;! G-u9a~-~ gox.'::. ernment has been reploving' ing families from an area near a town called Banes. The Banes area is about 20 miles northwest of Guantanamo Bay. The town of Banes is at the northwest end of Bahia Be de Nipe-Nipe Bay. Cuba doesn't have much of a navy, but President Kennedy announced recently that the Russians have been sending missile - armed torpedo boats to Cuba. Reports of the activity on the north coast came t h r 0 ugh sources which Navy officers at this.. base said have proved re- liable. Use Our Lay- Away . THE BIGGE(' T VALUE IN OUR HISTORY A Lif. Si. Silvertone Quality Portrai; Of Your Children or Entire Family' , -. '1 FOUR DAYS ON Y .. .. . Wed., Thurs., Fi i. I and Sat. & , Sept. 19.20.21.2 2 \ , In c....perotlon with Not"" nan, Famous Child Phot"'llrapht ,. WE OFFER YOUi ONE 11"x14" JrJ Life Size ii COME EARLY - AVOID WAITING SIL YERTON~ Th~~LL YOUR FRIENDS PORTRAIT~j Beautiful $ 95 Of Your .:1 $1995 CHILD or FAMI ILY . NO AGE UMlasT' Photograph . Na extra charge ,.gar~7~1es1 at GROUPS SAM! PRICE number at persons in ~i~ait. AI OM prica - GrouC' at IndivIduals Photaqrapher haan dU1ntlng this Limit 1 per family with n 6.month periacl avant from 9 a.m. to 5 II' p,m. 5.. SatIsfaction at your monay back Iactlon, at many prootxps shown. (Parents must accompany children) NO o'f1HER PURCHASE NECESSARY '''~ f . i j , Primaries (Continued from Page 1) father, Henry Cabot Lodge, de. feaUld John F. (Honey Fitz) Fitzgerald, the Pre sid en t '5 grandfather, for the Senate. The second round was the 1952 election when John Fitz- gerald Kennedy evened the score by turning the younger Henry Cabot Lodge. later U. S. ambassador to the U.N., out of the seat. THE THIRD family contest was in 1960 when President Kennedy's victory was a defeat for the Republican ticket on which the former U. N. ambas- sador was the nominee for vice president. The voting is the climax to Qne .of the longest primary cam- paigns ever seen in the state. The combatants began state- wid e stumping immediately after the June conventions and have been going without letup. Somerville Dam Tickets Still On Sale Here Tickets for the barbecue Sat- urday in Somerville, in connec- tion with ground breaking cere- monies for the Somerville Dam and Reservoir, are still on sale in Bryan. Jimmy Dillon, manager of the Bryan-College Station Chamber of Commerce, reported that ticket sales have been rather slow here. Vice President Lyndon John- son and other dignitaries on the national and state le'vel are to participate in the activities. '/;>I~,' Spacemen <Continued from Page 1) night when the men were ad. vised they had been accepted. GILRUTH indicated only 15 of the 16 astronauts will be available for space flights. Donald K. Slayton was nam. ed coordinator of astronaut ac- tivities and Gilruth all but rul. ed Slayton out of the forth. coming two.man flights of Pr0- ject Gemini and the three-man Apollo shots. Slayton, 38, trained for the May 24 three-orbit Mercury flight but was replaced by M. Scott Carpenter because of a heart condition. "Unless there is some change in the medical situation. it is very doubtful about his flying," Gi1ruth said. WaIter C. Williams, associate director of the center, said Slay- ton will be responsible for as- signments of flight test person_ nel to training activities and engineering assginments and will B:ct as perso9!!.l- advisor to Dr. GIlruth and mYs.:el,L;on flight crew affairs." fJ*\:' " ANOTHER SPACE: "lab offi. cial said Slayton's recommenda. tions will be a major factor in selecting Gemini ani Apollo .crewmen. Both Gilruth and Williams emphasized the new astronaut., will be trained for Gemini and Apollo. Including Slayton, an Air Force major, the team has six naval officers, seven Air Force officers, two civilians' and one Marine. .. . .A " iIId, .. !~ "'t ';. .. Teaching in Hong Kong Described by Aggie-Ex .. By HENRY ALS",:EYER . A&l:M Informahon (Special to The Eagle) 1COLLEGE STATION - A Texas A&M College graduate has returned to the campus aft- er four years of teaching in the Crown Colony of Hong Kong, one of the colorful cities of the world. Charles K. Locke found teaching and- life in the Far East II rewarding experience. Quite possibly he may return after completing a master's de- gre:e in educatioJl at Texas A"8iM. He is serving as a gradu- ate- assistant in the A&M Col- lege "'-Department of Education and Psycholo~ Locke received the Bachelor cf Arts in EdUt-ation degree trom T~jfa5 A&M: in 1955 and ;Jf also received ...i~~m mission as r a s~nd lieutenan m~,the Anny. i-~ About a year'j ~.e met the young lady wh " pS to become ~ "~!~'tife. He had to go on to ~. ."" F;;OF~l!-', while she went to Hong " ".". Kon'g!as a missionary. Hi'MANAGED a.trip to Hong Kong while on leave from his unit in Korea, and the couple bec8.Q,)e engaged. Later in 1957 he refurned to the United State& and was released from active duty.'" I&ke calls Del Rio his home, and ~got a job in Eagle Pass. MeJl,nwhile, by his estimate, he w.ol the principals of "half the : ools in I Hong Kong. II In . iIle sunitner of 1958 he /We ut to Hong Kong. A few lIa~ after the wedding, Locke iiUit\rled the post of a teaching Phone T A 2.3?07 for Classified ~ lilUALS LOOK) AT THE BUILT-ON I BELT! .t \ t , ~.. ;-. , . " ,; . , .