18,436 READERS ™ BATTALION Join The March Of Dimes Number 216: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1957 Price Five Cents Israelis Slate Sinai Pull-out By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER UNITED NATIONS, UP) — An Israeli delegation spokesman an nounced last night that Israeli troops will pull out of the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula by Jan. 22 except for one point commanding the Gulf of Aqaba. He said U. N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold was informed of the decision by Israeli Ambas sador Abba Eban yesterday. The development came signifi cantly just before the return here of Mrs. Golda Meir, Israeli foreign minister, and as the African-Asian bloc in the U. N. moved to get U. N. censure of Israel for slow withdrawal. The Israeli Cabinet has been under strong domestic pressure not to yield any further ground. In Jerusalem, informants said Eban would hand Hammarskjold a proposal that the U. N. guaran tee freedom for Isi’aeli shipping through the Red Sea Gulf of Aqaba in exchange for further withdraw als. But Maj. Gen. Moshe Dayan, Is raeli chief of staff, told reporters after witnessing Israel’s withdraw al from El ’Arish yesterday, that he had no conferences scheduled with the U. N. force chief, Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, to discuss further withdrawals. The A1 ’Arish retreat was the second phase of a promised Israeli pullback. It left Israeli forces on a line in northern Sinai only 10 miles from the old Egyptian-Palestine frontier and the Gaza Strip. The promised Jan. 22 withdrawal would take the Israelis out of the desert and beyond the international frontier, the delegation spokes man said. He added that Eban told the secretary general Israel is willing to discuss the question of removing troops from Sharm el Sheikh, com manding the Gulf of Aqaba and the Straits of Tira, which lead to the southern Sinai port and Israeli naval base of Eilat. The spokesman said Eban has offered to discuss with Hammar skjold ‘points pertaining to pre vention of belligerence” in that ‘Fish’ Takes Test Series For Academy Phillip Robberson, a fresh man in Squadron 20, is pres ently undergoing testing at Ellington Air Force Base for possible entry into the Air Force Academy. Robberson, from Decatur, Ill., re ceived a congressional nomination to be accepted for the testing and held further eligibility by being already in military training. The Air Force Academy, tem porarily located at Lowry Air Force Base, Colorado while its per manent structures are now being erected at Colorado Springs, Colo., has a four year college training course leading to a bachelors de gree and a regular commission in the Air Force. Robberson is being tested at El lington AFB because it is his near est testing center. Ike Outlines Program Of $76 Million Relief No Sounding Board Says Paschal Price “We will not be a sounding board for A&M College or anyone else,” Paschal Price, publisher of the Twin City Star told College Station Kiwanis Club members at their luncheon yesterday. Price and the Texas business men who are backing the new Brazos County newspaper plan to U.S. College Students Favor Hungarian Aid Without War Sophomore Hospitalized After Collapse Clarence Cowart, s o p h o- more Industrial Engineering major from Jasper, under went major surgery for a rup tured spleen yesterday in St. Joseph’s Hospital in Bryan, hos pital authorities said. Cowart, a member of A AAA, collapsed at his desk Monday night while studying and was rushed to the College Hospital. He was transferred to St. Joseph’s where an operation revealed his trouble to be a ruptured spleen. Calls for blood donors went out in the Memorial Student Center and radio station WTAW. Suffi cient donors were found, hospital officials said. “His condition is satisfactory now,” hospital officals say. “There is no need for more blood if the patient continues in the same con dition.” By JOE TINDEL College students across the na tion feel that there is a way short of war which the United Nations can help Hungary regain freedom. An Associated Collegiate Press’ poll of a cross-section of college students said that 48 per cent of those interviewed hold this view. Only 27 per cent said there isn’t, while 25 per cent were undecided. Broken down by sexes, 51 per cent of males said there is and 30 per cent there isn’t. Only 19 per cent were undecided. More coeds, 44 per cent, said there is a way while 24 per cent said there isn’t. 32 per cent were undecided. Most common to students favor- CS Police Force Adds Three Men Three new police officers, two of them “rookies”, have been ad ded to the College Station police force to bring the body to its full strength of five men, according to City Manager Ran Boswell. Arlan Williams and William A. Lusk, Hearne, and L. L. Peikgrt of Corsicana are the new employ ees. Lusk and Peikert are in train ing. Lee Norwood is chief of the College Station police force. The remaining officer is Melvin Lue- dke. Ike Calls For Record Budget WASHINGTON, Jan. 16 (A 5 )— President Eisenhower handed Con gress today the biggest budget in peacetime history—a monumental $71,807,000,000 spending program designed mainly “to deter and, if need be, to defeat aggression.” Despite the huge contemplated outlays, Eisenhower figured that income for the fiscal year 1958, which starts next July 1, will exceed outgo. That would mean the third balanced budget in a row. To provide “a wise and reason able degree of protection for the nation,” Eisenhower urged that Congress put 63 cents out of every dollar—a total of $45,300,000,000 —into shoring up defenses of America and the free world. The budget lays expanding em phasis on guided missiles and nu clear arms. Blended into the government fi nancial blueprint is Eisenhower’s Weather Today Forecast calls for continued cloudiness in the area. Yesterday’s high was 40 degrees and this morniing’s low, 32—the reading at 10:30 this morning. legislative program, in massive detail. Mainly it is repetitious. The President asked for most of the items on the list in his State of the Union message to Congress last week or in other messages in past years. Again the program rules out a tax cut in favor of applying ex cess revenue to trimming the huge national debt. In developing plans for the com ing year, the President said he was guided by such objectives as: “Peace, justice and freedom for our own and other peoples; “Powerful armed forces to deter and, if need be, to defeat aggres sion; “A healthy and growing econ omy with prosperity widely shared.” Once more Eisenhower ear marked the bulk of the budget to keeping the nation’s military forces in “their present high state of readiness” and to introducing “new weapons.” Again it urges peaceful proj ects—federal aid for building schools, a broadened health pro gram, stimulation for housing, help for farmers and small busi nessmen. ing action short of war is the feel ing that the free world and espec ially the United Nations should exert pressure such as economic boycotts on the Soviet Union. A junior from one school gives this opinion: “We should place embargos on Russian trade and send UN ob servers into Hungary.” Another college junior suggests another form of pressure. “Exert more propaganda pres sure; Russia is highly sensitive to world opinion,” he says. Some students feel diplomatic maneuvers are the answer. Others advocate another summit confer ence. A few students feel that we should go as far as to threaten Russia with war. One sophomore feels we should insist that Communist satellites be allowed political independence by freedom of choice at the ballot box. A sophomore coed at another school expressed a different opin ion. “I think Russia is afraid to start a war and we could do almost any thing to free Hungary,” she says. A freshman coed at another col- Rebel Leader Set To Die In Hungary BUDAPEST, (TP) _ A Com munist military court was report ed to have imposed a death sen tence yesterday on Josef Dudas, a leader of Hungary’s uprising against the Russians. A usually reliable source said Dudas, a bold looking man with a varied political background, was condemned on charges that includ ed seizure and suppression of the Communist newspaper Szabad Nep Oct. 29. Confirmation was lacking. Hun gary’s government — controlled press has said not a word about Dudas’ trial, though it has ac knowledged the imposition of 22 death sentences so far under a martial law decree that makes even the illegal possession of am munition a capital crime. A 20-year-old welder was the lat est addition to the official list. The trade union paper Nepakarat announced the welder, Istvan Hor vath, is to die and others of a fighting group he Iqd—'the num ber was not stated—are going to prision for 5 to 10 years for “dis arming revenue officers” and oth er offenses in Budapest. Secrecy shrouds the trials. Florist Conference Commercial florists from Texas will hold their annual conference in the MSC Saturday through Mon day. About 120 persons are ex pected to attend. Sponsored by the Department of Floriculture and Landscape Architecture, A. F. De- Werth of that department will be chairman. lege believes “moral support and encouragement by the free na tions” is the answer. Students who say there is no way to aid Hungary short of war feel that Russia is too strong to bully and the UN is ineffective. “As one of the two powerful nations in the world today the USSR will not allow outsiders to change its basic policy,” a senior from one college says. A freshman coed says Russia has already stated that there will be all-out war if anyone interferes. Another freshman says: “You can’t talk with Russia and get anything done.” Finally a sophomore coed ex presses her views. “Unless Russia would relent, there seems to be no alternative other than war, as much as we would hate to witness it.” Students who were against start ing a war said that it is heart breaking to freedom-loving na tions of the world that they are unable to give Hungarian freedom fighters anything but moral en couragement, lest other action cause a general war between the East and the West. New Program To Encourage Ag Professors A new fellowship program to aid staff members in ob taining advanced degrees has been announced by Dr. J. C. Miller, dean of the School of Agriculture. The fellowships are called the Chas. N. Shepardson Fund Grants and are financed by the Shepard son Fund. According to an agreement be tween Mr. and Mrs. Shepardson and the college, the fund is pro vided “To encourage young mem bers of the staff of the college to make their professional careers in teaching and to assist such staff members in improving their com petence as teachers.” Fellowships of $500 will be awarded on the basis of the staff member’s devotion and interest, capacity for and need for further preparation, need of financial as sistance, and promise of advance ment and improvement. The committee that will select fellowship recipients consists of the dean of the School of Agri culture, the president of the col lege, and other members appointed by the president. Charles N. Shepardson, former dean of agricultui’e, is now agri cultural member of the Board of Governors for the Federal Reserve System, Washington, D.C. He and Mrs. Shepardson estab lished the fund “To the end that the teaching program of the col lege would be strengthened for the benefit of its students and for the advancement of its educational purposes.” have their paper circulating “dur ing March,” he said. They expect ultimately a circulation of 25,000, with 15,000 of these outside Brazos County. “Right now there is little free dom of the press,” he said, “due to ‘gutless’ editors and publishers who bend over backward to ap pease advertisers and business interests.” Price stressed that the new publication would be devoted to local news with “only enough” national wire service news. He said that the editorials would not be affected by any outside interests of any kind. The new paper will “probably” lease the United Press wire service he added. In stressing that his paper would not be a sounding board for A&M he said, “Right now I would advo cate in an editorial that the Chan cellor of the A&M System not live on the A&M campus.” Library Schedule During exams next week, the College Library will keep regular opening and closing hours. The library plans to be open from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. on Monday, Jan. 28 through Feb. 1. Beginning Monday, Feb. 3, regular hours will again be followed. Drough t-Plagued Farmers to Benefit By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH WICHITA, Kan., UP)—President Eisenhower yesterday outlined administration plans for a 76-million-dollar program of supplemental emergency relief for drought-plagued farm ers and ranchers. On the longer-range aspect of the problem, the Presi dent called for a reappraisal of credit policies—both govern ment and private—to determine whether more liberal loans can be extended to those who have been hard hit by one of the worst droughts in history. Eisenhower announced, too, that Western railroads have agreed to extend another program designed to provide relief. The railroad’s 50 per cent reduction in freight rates for hay R ! *s* Draw Sympathy From Crowd Members of the Ross Volun teer Company drew more than the usual admiration of mili tary “spit and polish” at yes terday’s Inaugural Parade in Austin, according to the As sociated Press reports. Sympathy seemed to go all- out to the lads, clad in their spotless, white cotton uni forms, which were no match for the cold chill atmosphere of Austin. Most people on hand for the celebration felt the need of wool overcoats rather than white cotton blouses. shipments was scheduled to have expired today. The cut will be continued through March 31, the Presi dent said. All of these relief steps—with the emergency 76-million-dollar program subject to congressional approval—were set forth by the President as he concluded a two- day tour of the Southwestern drought area. His short-range emergency plan, on which Eisenhower said he will seek swift congressional approval, calls for: ® 1. Authority to use 25 million dollars from the federal disaster loan revolving fund to provide ad ditional emergency livestock feed assistance to drought — stricken farmers and ranchers. • 2. An extension until June 30, 1958, providing for use of 25 mil lion dollars in unobligated funds (See IKE, Page 2) Always A Cheery Smile Housing Office Dorm Clerk Looks After Her Aggies By DAVE McREYNOLDS Every day a smiling, joking, middle-aged woman smiles her way into the hearts of Aggies over the Housing Office desk. Whether reserving rooms, look ing for lost keys, wanting to make room changes or just looking for a buddy’s address, students can’t miss Mrs. Mary Vance who usually takes care of these matters. Unlike most people who deal with the public, Mrs. Vance invar iably greets each student with a smile, a kind word, and usually succeeds in sending him away in a better frame of mind. She knows most of them by their first names. Her public is not like other pub lics. It is mostly teen-age stu dents who come into the office she’s been in since 1950, feeling they have the weight of the world on their shoulders. These are the times when her goodwill gets a real test. All students dropping out of college must check by her desk. As dormitory and room reserva tion clerk, she has to initial their checkout slip and accept their room key. At this time Mrs. Vance does Jaer best to talk the student into reconsidering his move, sleep on it a night, and come back the next day. Many of them stay in school. “I wouldn’t change jobs with any one on the campus,” she says “It gives a person a chance to come in contact with the boys and think young.” Mrs. Vance has her own ideas of age, for as she puts it — “We are all growing older, whether we accept the fact or not, when your hair turns grey you can say it’s just premature, but when your joints begin to ache, it begins to dawn on you.” Mrs. Vance was very familiar with the A&M campus when she accepted the job in the Housing Office back in 1950. As a girl she used to “hang around” the old Aggie Grocery Store, which her father, Phillip Andrews, managed. The store was located where the Building and College Utilities headquarters is now. “No, I didn’t meet my husband there,” she laughed. “He was a Bryan boy.” The lucky man is F. D. (Granny) Vance and he and Mrs. Vance have two children, a boy and a girl. The son, Richard is a sophomore at A&M. Their daughter, Pat, will graduate from Stephen F. Austin High School in Bryan this year. Mrs. Vance’s smiles and “pats on the back” have not gone un noticed. According to other mem bers of the office force she has re ceived numerable letters, cards and phone calls from the parents of students the world over for her thoughtfulness to their sons. “Maybe I talk too much,” she says, “but each boy is an individ ual with me and if you don’t think about the students what would make the college go anyhow ? There would be no school without the boys,” she pointed out. Mrs. Mary Vance