Circulated Daily To 90 Per Cent Of Local Residents Battalion Published By A&M Students For 75 Years PUBLISHED DAILY IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Number 178: Volume 53 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1954 Price Five Cents I lighway Police Warn Drivers To Get Stickers Captain E. K. Bi’owning-, Jr., commanding officer of District No. 1 of the Texas Highway Patrol with headquarters at Austin, an nounced today that Highway Pa trolmen would begin issuing tick ets to persons who operate an pito on the streets and highways after April 15 without a current inspec tion sticker. The Patrol Captain said that the men in his command have all re ceived orders to that effect as the result of a directive issued at Aus tin by Homer Garrison, Jr., Direc tor of the Texas Department of Public Safety. Browning said that Garrison’s order was made follow ing definite instructions from the State Public Safety Commission that enforcement of the modified motor vehicle inspection law which was enacted by the last Legisla ture would definitely begin fol lowing the April 15 inspection deadline. Captain Browning also pointed out that local and county police officers are empowered to enforce the inspection law. According to the Patrol com mander, only about 25 per cent of the cars in the 13 county area have been inspected to date. This means, he said, that car owners who have not yet had their vehicles checked will run the risk of being caught in a last minute “log jam” at the in spection stations if they delay longer in complying with the law. “Our Patrolmen will continue to issue warnings to motorists whose cars do not bear a current inspection sticker through April 15,” Captain Browning said in a prepared statement for the press and radio. “After that date, of fenders will face court action.” Split Between East and West Threatens Big Four Meeting Molotov Opens Session With Verbal Attack on US Free Cup of Coffee If They’re Lucky CLARKSVILLE, Tex.—GP)_ A traffic summons here is good for a free cup of coffee ... to violators from out of town. “Welcome to Clarksville,” the ticket says. Then after listing the violation, it goes on: “Don’t worry about it this time.” “Now that you are here, will you have a cup of coffee with us ? ” The ticket is redeem able for coffee in any cafe in town. BING RECEIVES AWARD—Roland Bing, manager of student publications fon leave from A&M receives a prize from James E. Taylor, executive director of Texas Motor Trar "tation association. His entry was prepared as a magazine article for part of his work m a University of Texas public relations class. “Men Reds Wi th ou l Co un try 9 9 A sk Take Them Back Dance Set For* Polio Tonight Fund Communists Send Letter to Dean PANMUNJOM— GP> — Attempts by liaison officers to arrange fur ther preliminary Korean peace talks were recessed by the Commu nists today pending a high-level Red move to get the stalled nego tiations started again. The Reds turned over at a brief meeting a sealed letter to U. S. envoy Arthur Dean, now in Wash ington, from top Communist dele gates. They said further sessions of liaison secretaries would be mean ingless since their senior delegates fvere in direct contact with Dean. Dean was not available for com ment. A State Department official said the Red proposal could be handled by aides on the scene who Were empowered to act for Dean. There was no official hint of the letter’s contents, but the North Ko rean Pyongyang radio said earlier the Communists had sent a mes sage to Dean proposing that ne gotiations to a .nge a peace con ference resume Monday. The U. S. envoy broke off the talks Dec. 12 after the Commu nists had accused the United States of conniving with South Korea in the release of 27,000 anti-Red Ko rean War prisoners last June. Dean said at the time he never would return to Panmunjom un less the Reds retracted their charge of perfidy. In recent liaison meet ings Allied Liaison Secretary Ed ward Martin has tried unsuccess fully to have the Communists ptrike the charge from the record. Meanwhile, the U. N. Command Bgain accused the Communists of holding back some prisoners and reiterated its demand for an in vestigation. The charge chme as the U. S. Defense Department in Washing ton reported that 80 Amei'icans known to have been prisoners of the Communists still are missing. Communist news correspondents have acknowledged that the Reds are holding as “political prisoners an undisclosed number of Ameri can airmen who presumably para chuted or crashed in Manchuria, aci’oss the Yalu River from North Korea, during aerial battles. The Red newsmen said their release would have to be negotiated through diplomatic channels. A U. N. Command letter to the Neutral Nations Supervisory Com mission today accused the Reds of pressing into Communist armies some Allied prisoners. Presum ably they were South Koreans. PANMUNJOM—CP)—Twenty-one self-assured Americans pleaded publicly today for the Communists to take them back as “free men” from their only homeland now— the barren Korean neutral zone. The Reds have refused to ac cept them as war prisoners and the 21 have rejected the United States—at least for the presOnt. A spokesman told a press con ference they expect to return to America “at some time in the fu ture when we can fight for world peace without being persecuted.” “We are not Communists,” de clared Sgt. Richard Corden of East Providence, R. I., “though some of us hope to be.” He read from a prepared statement which he said was approved by every man in the group. The Americans in later individ ual interviews spouted Red prop aganda catch-phrases and praise for the Communist command. They looked newsmen squarely in the eye as they answered questions. Why choose communism ? Sgt. Lai-i’ance V. Sullivan, Omaha: “The American people know how the Negro is treated in the United States. Definitely this is one of my reasons . . . Of course, my desire to work for world peace is the main reason. I can’t speak out for peace in America without being persecuted.” Cpl. Moris R. Wills, Fort Ann, N. Y.: “People who voice an opin ion for peace in the United States are persecuted and their voices suppressed. There is not a demo cratic government in the United States as long as McCarthyism and McCarranism are allowed to exist —the people cannot be allowed to fight for peace. ‘There is no freedom of speech . People in office in the United States were put there by those who hold monopolies and control money.” The 21 Americans looked healthy, rosy-cheeked and warm in their huge blue padded Chinese over coats. They were cheerful, had good flesh on their faces and looked well fed. All the prisoners were clean shaven. They posed readily for photo graphers. There was no indication they were ill at ease among fellow Americans, although some jok«?d and laughed about “mike fright” when they faced radio and tele vision microphones. The Americans, 1 Briton and 325 Koreans mai’ched jauntily from their isolated compound in the quiet buffer zone between the huge Red and Allied armies in Korea. Communist newsmen also attended 'the conference in the Panmunjom hut where the armistice agree ment was signed last summer. The extraordinary news confer ence appeared designed to get the Communists off the hook and let them accept the pro-Red POWs as free men rather than war pris oners. , In his statement, Corden said the prisoners understood why the Communist command refused to accept them as war prisoners. “Therefore we ask the Korean and Chinese side to accept our return ... to consider us as free men.” The men denied they had been offered any inducements by the Communists to stay behind. Students Plan Ohservation Work Seven junior agricultural educa' tion majors will do a week of ob servation work between semesters. The purpose of the week of ob servation is to acquaint the stu dents with the teaching methods and procedures used in the school and the agricultural conditions of the community. Clinton L. Bippert, Hugh L. Byrd, L. T. Cave, C. E. Lawrence, James SoRelle, Herb Warren and Bobby Rankin are the students. Authorities Confused About Mexican Labor 7^ TURK OH ^ FRIDAY. JANUARY 29 CALEXICO, Calif. — <7P) — The feeding and housing of some 10,000 Mexican farm laborers across the border presented a ser ious problem today while American and Mexican authorities switched from one policy to another. The waiting workers, victims of the confusion, want jobs in Cali fornia’s Imperial Valley, where harvest labor is needed. , These developments came rapidly during the past 24 hours: The trapped woi-kers increased alarmingly in number across the line in Mexicali, where Mexican guards sought to prevent them from going over into the United States because a contract labor agreement between the two gov ernments has expired. In this bordertown on the Ameri can side, authorities wei'e recruit ing those braceros—farm laboi’ers —who managed to cross in spite of the Mexican guards. Then, last night, the Mexican guards suddenly let down the bars. The braceros flooded through the A contribution to March of Dimes will be the admission for the March of Dimes dance to be held tonight at Sbisa Hall. Manning Smith will be master of ceremonies and he will be assist ed by several callers. Music will be furnished by Cecil Hopson and his string band. The dance is sponsored by the Promenaders and the Golden Slippers dance clubs of College Station and Bryan. During the evening Nita and Manning Smith will present their original dance, Lady of Spain. A special exhibition will also be given by Camille Kennedy and Jimmy Boswell, local dance team, and Bud dy Allen and JoAnn Norwood from the Piedmont community dance club. Local callers are Sam P. Ken nedy, Lee Thompson, O. J. Godbe- here, Carl Lyman and Mrs. H. A. Luther. Out-of-town callers include Miss Olga Emhoff of Anderson, Mark Towery, Rockdale; Joe Spacek, Dime Box; Mrs. Alex Moody, Nav- asota; and Tim Collier of Houston. Collier is a former resident of Bryan and an ex-president of the Promenaders. Mrs. H. E. Hampton and Rose mary Burroughs, refreshment chairmen, have appointed as their committee, Mrs. Mills Walker, Mrs. Lou Lavigne, Mrs. Bobby Gold smith, Mrs. Roy Wingren, Mrs. P. W. Barker and Mrs. L. L. Stu art from the Promenaders. They also chose Mrs; Frank Ish, Mrs. Lucille Foster, and Mrs. Man ning Smith from the Golden Slip pers. Hosts and hostesses for the eve ning are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ben- 1, Mr. and Mrs. Ewing Brown, Mr. and Mrs, R. R. Lyle, Mrs. Nell Glasscock, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Burchard and C. E. Sandstedt. Bricker Willing To Accept Compromise on A mendment border gates. And, just as sudden ly, the American guards slammed the door on their side. They in dicated the flow was jamming im migration machinery. U. S. immigration officials said Impei’ial Valley farmers had near ly all the Mexicans they needed The lifting of the bars by Mex ican authorities last night was ex plained this way by Mexicali’s im migration chief, J. Tulio Lopez Lira: “We are not permitting our people to cross. We merely have stopped using force to keep them in Mexico. We kept them in the country until now in order to ex plain that their contracts under the new American hiring plan would be less advantageous than conditions which had prevailed un der the old United States-Mexico labor agreement.” The Baja California state gov ernment yesterday appointed a committee to ai’range transporta tion for the laborers back to their homes in interior Mexico at the rate of 500 a day. WASHINGTON — OP) — Sen. Bricker (R-Ohio) said today a de sire to keep the Republican party from being “torn apart” would lead him to accept a reasonable com promise on altering treaty-making powers in the Constitution. Bricker disputed President Ei senhower’s newly stated conten tions that the Ohioan’s proposed amendment would (1) make it im possible for the United States to deal with friendly countries on de fense matters, (2) strip the Pres ident of his historical role as the nation’s spokesman, and (3) force American withdrawal from leader ship in world affairs. Ike Writes Knowland In a letter yesterday to Sen. Knowland of California, the GOP floor leader, Eisenhower said he would subscribe fully “to the prop osition that no treaty or interna tional agreement can contravene the Constitution.” He would back an amendment to make this clear, he added. But the Pi’esident said he was “unalterably opposed” to Bi-icker’s proposal, now before the Senate for debate expected to begin to morrow, on the ground that “it would impair our hopes and plans for peace and the successful achievement of the important mat ters now under discussion.” He added: “This would include the diver sion of atomic energy from war like to peaceful purposes.” Release of the President’s letter was regarded in some quarters as indicating th administration has decided it must fight the issue out in the Senate at the risk of split ting the Republicans. However, Knowland said compromise at tempts would continue. Disputing the President’s stand, Bricker said his amendment would not in any way affect negotiations with friendly nations for mutual defense or impede Eisenhower’s plan to pool atomic energy re sources for peacetime uses. “I have asked for a bill of par ticulars on this point and I never have received it,” Bricker said in an interview. “My amendment would not in any way, shape or form affect negotiations in inter national affairs and in no way would it restrict or interfere with the President in the proper con duct of his duties.” Bricke^ , said his aim is to write into the constitution wording “that will keep the President personally or two thirds of the senators from making laws for the states.” He said this would be accomplished by a clause in his amendment wh-ich says “a treaty shall become effective as internal law in the United States only through legis lation which would be valid in the absence of treaty.” It is this language—the “which clause”—at which the administra tion balks. Officials have said it would prevent the President from executing a valid treaty dealing with any matters such as narcotics or divorces which are reserved to the states by the Constitution. They have also criticized a sec tion to give Congress power to “regulate” executive agreements Bricker continued: “I don’t want to interfere with the President’s international pow ers in political affah’s—in fact I have fought for them. But I don’t want treaties or executive agree ments to destroy state govern ments.” BERLIN—UP)—A wide-open split between Russia and the Western Powers threatened today to transform the Big Four conference—focus of hope for a better deal in a war- weary world—into just another East-West soapbox. In the opening session of the foreign ministers’ meeting yesterday Russia’s V. M. Molotov blistered the United States. U. S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles drafted his reply for delivery at today’s session. When Molotov finished, Dulles accused him of getting away from the main purpose of the conference. He said he would try to get the parley “back on the track” today. France’s Georges Bidault and Britain’s Anthony Eden ♦made it clear in their opening ' speeches the West considers the main purpose here is to u n i f y Germany, beginning with free all-German elec tions, and to complete an Austrian treaty of independence. Molotov spent little time on either subject. But in the tough game of power politics at the heart of the Berlin meeting, Molotov ap peared to Western diplomats to be pursuing these deliberate aims: 1. To divert attention from what American officials believe to be Russia’s weak position in Germany and therefore Russia’s inability to negotiate to her advantage on un ification. 2. To drive a wedge between the United States and her allies, par ticularly France. In this connec- - tion, he sympathized with French reluctance to join West Germany in the European Army as desired by the Americans. Molotov also invited Bidault to be his first con ference dinner guest at the Soviet Embassy in East Berlin tonight. While this looked like a diplomatic gesture, it could also be a signifi cant straw in the wind in Soviet policy. 3. To press the Western nations into accepting Communist China as a world power and a member of a future five-power conference. At one point Molotov appeared to use the possibility of a Korean settlement as a bargaining weapon. He said an agreement on a meet ing with Red China would “con tribute to a removal of a number of difficulties existing at the pres ent time in regard to the Korean question.” He also charged the" United States with violating the Korean armistice agreement on prisoners of war. ; He' said the United States had denied Red China its “lawful rights,” especially a seat in the United Nations. Molotov accused the United States of menacing the Soviet Un ion with a global ring of military bases. He accused the United States of backing German militar ists and planning “aggression and revenge” in Europe, an apparent reference to German desires to get back the eastern territoris held by Poland since World War II. American officials labeled these and other points of attack as old stuff, but deeply disappointing. They had hoped the new top com mand in the Kremlin would take a moi'c conciliatory line. Bidault was reported to have voiced similar reaction. Official British reaction was less sharp, taking the view Molotov’s line was not unexpected and, while disappointing, did not necessarily seal the failui’e of the conference. Toward the end of his speech Molotov put forth his ideas for a conference work program. Manning Smith Caller for Dance Local Students Get Degrees At Graduation INSULT TO INJURY OTTAWA, Kan. — CP) — In his many years as a cafe operator, Bruce Allison has come across numerous “lunchers”—persons wdio carry their own lunch into an eat ing place and merely order a cup of coffee. So he wasn’t too surprised when two women sat down in a booth and unwrapped lunches. But a short time later, Allison noticed steam coming from the booth. He investigated. The women calmly were brewing their own coffee with a canned heat percolator. Twenty-five students from Col lege Station and Bryan were awarded degrees at the mid-term graduation at A&M College. Four received advanced degrees. School of Agriculture, bachelor of science, agricultural administra tion, Gordon Lee Smith; agronomy, Norman D. Flados, Joseph Bowen Lloyd, Ronald D. Wade. School of Arts and Sciences, bachelor of business adminisUa- tion, accounting, John Ralph Bain and James Martin Brown; general business, Herbert Hoover Alford and Hugo Joe Endler; economics, William Albert Libby; physical ed ucation, Johnny Baxter Colley, Bobby Joyce Pate, James Albert Prewit and Richard Bleakley Ross. School of Engineering, bachelor of science, industiial education, Milton Eugene Davis, Jr., John Henry Killough, Wayne Leroy Strickler, Robert Richard Hollen- baugh and Kenneth Ray Morrison; industrial engineering, Donald Farmer; mechanical engineering, Donald Harold Niederer. Advanced degrees, master of sci ence, agricultural economics, James Russell Bradley; animal nutrition, Donald Barton Hudman. Master of Education, Robert Roger McAdams. School of Arts and Sciences, Bachelor of Business Administration, Accounting, Wil liam Robert Martin. Weather Today CHANGE KITTY GROWS SEARCY, Ark. — CP) — A bank here stocked a make-your-own change jar with $15. Three months later, after numerous cus tomers had fished in the kitty for change, there was slightly more than $15. Brrrrrr— Cloudy with occasional light rain today. Cold tonight with possible thunder storms, heavy rain show ers and light hail with heavy winds. High yesterday 74. Low this morning 64. Temperature^ in the 30’s late tonight.