The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, October 31, 1957, Image 1

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    THE
Town Hail
Tansgfot
Published Daily on the Texas A&M College Campus
Number 41: Volume 57
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1957
Price Five Cents
Eisenhower to
Paris
With Angelaires Playing
Town flail Hears
Harpist Tonite in
The Angelaires will bring their
refreshing charm, technical pro
wess and varied and exciting harp
music to Town Hall tonight at 8:30
Friday Final Day
For Fish Portraits
Freshmen Corps students will
have their last chance to get their
pictures in the ’58 Aggieland dur
ing the remainder of this week
when make-up pictures will be
taken at Aggieland Studio.
Uniform for the pictures is Class
“A” winter. Blouses are furnish
ed at the studio, but each man
must bring his own brass.
in G. Rollie White Colesium in
what may be one of the most fine
ly balanced programs of the year.
Presenting a program that ranges
from Bach to special arrangements
of . such songs as “Black Magic”
and “Greensleeves”, the Angelaires
will present a program that should
delight Town Hall audiences of
every musical taste.
The ensemble is composed of
five highly talented young ladies
who are equally at home on tele
vision or the stage. They have
made appearances on the Ed Sulli
van and Steve Allen shows.
Coached by Carlos Salzedo, the
unique quintet has won an envi-
New Highway Stripe
Puzzles Motorists
Changing the center stripe of
Texas Avenue in Bryan seems to
have many motorists who were
used to the old roadway wondering
which side of the street to drive
on, according, to Resident Engineer,
J. M. McLain, of the state high
way department.
With widening and improving
the highway, a new broad yellow
stripe was painted one lane west
of the old dash stripe. Many motor
ists still obviously haven’t noticed
Senior Aggieland
Picture Schedule
Corps senioi’s will have their por
trait made- for the Aggieland ’58
according to the following schedule.
They will be made at the Aggie
land Studio between ,8 and 5 on the
days scheduled.
Nov. 4-5: Corps Staff, First Reg-
imentj First, Second and Third Bat
talion staffs and A, B, C, E Infan
try.
Nov. 7-8 A Ordnance, B, C, Ar
mor, A, B, C Engineers, A Trans
portation, A, B, C, Field Artillery
and A, B, C AAA.
Nov. 11-12: Second Regiment,
First, Second, Third, Fourth Bat-
tallion Staffs, A Signal, A Quar
termaster, A Chemical and A Vet
erinary.
Nov. 14-15: A, B, C Composite, A,
B Athletics, Maroon Band, White
Band.
this, said McLain, and many keep
driving in the old larie which is
now for north bound traffic.
The two-car collision Avhich kill
ed an A&M freshman and a Gid-
dings man Tuesday night could
very well have happened under
such conditions according to inves
tigating- officers. The crash was
head-on with apparently no reason
other than the new center stripe
markings, to cause the accident,
Bryan police investigating the
wreck said.
McLain said the new center
stripe was to be crossed under no
conditions except when turning at
street corners.
Work on the highway began last
March and should be completed by
January, 1958, according to Mc
Lain. The work covers all road
way on Highway 6 (Texas Ave
nue in Bryan) from Jersey Street
in College Station to 27th Street
in Bryan.
When completed, the highway
will be 64 feet wide, allowing
room for two lanes with parking
room on both sides of the roadway.
At four places of especially heavy
traffic congestion, the highway
will widen to four lanes.
The new highway will be com
plete with concrete curbs and storm
gutters. College Station and Bry
an are paying for cost of the curbs
and gutters and the highway de
partment is paying for the actual
paving of the street.
Talented
Coliseum
able reputation from coast to coast
for their fine musicianship, capti
vating charm and thrilling arrange
ments.
Admission to the performance
will be by Town Hall season ticket
or $2 for-general admission, $2.50
for reserved and $1 for high school
and younger seating.
Blast Off Set
As AF Ball
Approaches
“Around the World in Three
Hours”, will be the theme of the
annual Air Force Ball in Sbisa
Hall Nov. 8 at 8:30 p.m.
Cadets will dance to the music
of the Air Force Band of the West,
thought to be among the top in
entertainment circles, Capt. Rolla
Griffith, sponsor of the event,
said.
Highlights of the occasion will
be crowning of the Air Force
Sweetheart. She wall be selected
from pictures submitted by Air
Force cadets earlier in the year.
Final plans have been completed
for the function, a major event on
the schedule of Fall Military Week
end happenings.
Lasting from 8:30 until Midnight
Yell Practice, the ball is open to
all cadets in the Air Force branch
of the Cadet Corps.
Teamsters Petition
Against Hoffa
NEW YORK (A*)—Leaders of a
rank-and-file movement to throw
out the election of James Hoffa
to the presidency of the Teamsters
Union indicated yesterday that
thousands of Teamsters all over the
country are signing petitions
against Hoffa.
John Cunningham, chairman of a
New York group which has brought
court action aimed at declaring
Hoffa’s election illegal said 65
numbers of Hoffa’s own local in
Detroit have signed petitions.
Plans Bipartisan
Discussion First
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON,—President Eisenhower announced yes
terday that in the interests of bolstering “free world securi
ty” he plans to attend a NATO Council meeting in Paris in
mid-December.
First, Eisenhower told a news conference, he will hold
his annual session with congressional leaders of both parties.
This, he said, will be “in the tradition oof bipartisan respon
sibility for keeping the country on a single track in foreign
relations.”
As the President prepares for these conferences, he is
still puzzled at the significance of Russia’s dropping his post
war associate and acquaintance, Marshal Georgi Zhukov, as
♦minister of defense.
B'hl „ Eisenhower said that “there
Pleasanton
To Integrate
Quietly Friday
PLEASANTON, Tex., (AP)
—This southern Texas town
of 5,000 is planning to quietly
integrate its high school Fri
day in contrast to the racial
struggles elsewhere this school
year.
“We want to show the world it
can be dope in a Christian-like
way,” said the high school prin
cipal, D. C. Baldree.
Voters approved integration 323-
88 last Saturday in a local option
election—the first under a new
Texas law. This law requires a
favorable vote before any school
district in the state can integrate.
The penalty for noncompliaiice is
loss of state aid and accreditation.
Flu Hits A&M Again;
70 Cases in Hospital
Twenty-five new cases « of flu
were reported by the College Hos
pital yesterday as the virus con
tinued to spread at A&M.
More than 70 patients were in
the hospital last night, which is
three times the normal amount,
Dr. C. R. Lyons, hospital supervi
sor, said. •
He said at least half the flu
was of the Asian variety. Although
tests have not been made on most
of .the cases, Dr. Lyons said the
hospital staff had become familiar
with the characteristics and that
they were reasonably sure of the
diagnosis.
“Asian flu is usually accompan
ied by high temperatures, up
around 103 and 104,” he said. “The
common colds and sniffles may be
accompanied by low temperatures,
but usually the temperature does
not rise as in the Asian variety.”
The Corps is still virtually free
from the attack as most of the
virus victims come from day stu
dents living in College View and
Civilian dormitories.
“It looks like the flu will be
with us most of the winter,” Dr.
BUSINESS RISE
OKLAHOMA CITY <A>)—Officers
brought a man before City Judge
James Demopolos on a vagrancy
charge.
“What’s your business?” Demo
polos asked.
“I’m unemployed,” was the ans
wer.
“How do you support yourself?”
the judge pressed.
“I don’t need any money to get
along,” the man said.
“Well, you do now,” Demopolos
replied. “I fine you $20 for vag
rancy.” i ,
Lyons said yesterday as the hos
pital list grew. He said the virus
seemed to be bouncing back and
forth across the state, and blam
ed weekend trips as the largest
factor in causing flu at A&M to
hang on.
“As Aggies go home or on week
end ti’ips they contact other out
breaks and carry the germs back
here,” he explained.
He thought the holidays coming
up this winter would aid the epi
demic growth here, since Aggies
will be traveling to all parts of
the flu-ridden state.
Other colleges have the same
problem. Dr. Lyons said he talk
ed to University of Texas’ doctors
by telephone yesterday and they re
ported continued outbreaks there.
“Oddly enough,” the hospital
supervisor said, “having the virus
does not make one immune to it.
Many of the same students who
have had the flu recently come
back with a new case.”
He said the hospital was giving
flu vaccine shots to cunent vic
tims as treatment. A good supply
of the vaccine is on hand at the
hospital, which any student may
get for $1 a shot.
Weather Today
Continued partly cloudy and
warm today and tomorrow is the
forecast for the College Station
area, according to the college
weathher station.
Aggies going to the Arkansas
game will find it somewhat cooler
in Fayetteville Saturday.
This morning’s low thermometer
reading was 60 degrees at 3:30. At
1 p. m. yesterday the mercury hit
a high of 80 degrees.
“The vaccine seems to be the
only way of gaining immunity to
the virus,” Dr. Lyons added.
is some reason for the extra
ordinary frequency of changes
in the Soviet ruling group
since the death of Stalin.” But he
said any effoi’t to determine why
the men in the Kremlin do what
they do produces only highly spec
ulative results.
It isn’t known, he said, whether
Zhukov is “actually degraded, or
whether there is some other move
contemplated.”
Eisenhower attached one condi
tion to his attending the meeting
of the 15 member nations of the
Noi’th Atlantic Treaty Organiza
tion. He said that, “Assuming . .
the majority of the heads of gov-
einment accept I intend to accept.”
It really wasn’t a condition,
though, as NATO had announced
houi’s earlier that the chiefs of
government of the member coun
tries would attend the session.
The idea of bringing the chiefs
of state together grew out of last
week’s meetings here between Eis
enhower and Prime Minister Mac
millan of Britain.
The two also agreed on a greater
sharing of nuclear and scientific
information in the free world as
a means of countering Soviet ad
vances in missiles and the conquest
of outer space. For the United
States, this will require lowering
some of the secrecy barriers set
up in the Atomic Energy Act.
On that, the chief executive said
he will have definite proposals to
lay before the early December
meeting of congressional leaders.
Georgi Zhukov
Causing Worry
In Keel Regime
By The Associated Press
Continued silence on Mar
shal Georgi Zhukov’s future
indicates the Communist par
ty has a tiger by the tail.
Party boss Nikita Khrush
chev apparently has touched off
an internal crisis he wanted to
avoid. Old soldier Zhukov may
have proved just a bit tough to
handle.
In his chat with correspondents
Tuesday night Khrushchev scoffed
at reports the Communist party
Central Committee was in session.
But there are many indications to
the contrary. Khrushchev has de
nied many things which later turn
ed out to be true.
There can be little question that
he has been trying to master a
major political crisis.
Here is one possibility—admit-
edly speculative!
Thei’e have been indications the
party’s grip on the army-control
through party spies in the officer
corps and the ranks — has been
slipping.
Zhukov has resisted the system.
The party demands complete
subservience by all branches of
Soviet life, including the military.
Its authority is jeopardized if this
control slips. Khrushchev and his
party cohorts had to do something.
They felt Zhukov had to be ous
ted from dii-ect control over the
armed forces. Confident he could
swing it, Khrushchev had Zhukov
removed as minister of defense.
He was going to offer Zhukov
another high position — perhaps .
premier in place of Bulganin—but
with no great shock to party, pub
lic or army.
Correction
The story in Tuesday’s Bat
talion on the college dining halls
stated that students pay $1.45
daily for the three meals. In cor
rection of the mistake: Stu
dents pay only $1.35 per day
for meals, or 45 cents per meal.
—Battalion Staff Photo
CHS Homecoming Queen Candidates
Candidates for 1957 Consolidated Homecoming Queen to be crowned Friday night at
halftime of the CHS-Cypress Fairbanks football game on Tiger Field, are (1. to r. stand
ing) Millie Caughlin, Pat Jackson, Sue Ross, Margaret Huff, (bottom row) Suzanne Sor
ensen, Nancy Ray, Marilyn McElroy and Ann Cleland.