LlSRABpr FE 12 COPIES f i ) ' ! 18,440 RiADIRS THE CAMPUS CHEST Published Daily on the Texas A&M College Campus Number 65: Volume 57 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1957 Price Five Cents . V - V. • ■•• • . ■< v . • •: & A ' p' Santa’s Early This Year Battalion Staff Photo A couple of Ags look on as a group of chil dren clutch the presents they received at one of the outfit parties for local needy children. At SC, ON A III Humphrey Strikes At US Foreign Policies ; By JOE TIND£L Yi < hi —-foreign policy has loo long been based on fear rather than hope, and reaction rather than action, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn) told SCON A III dele gates and guests Friday. “It is time that we walked con- (fidently with the full stature and Jtrength of our history and our present capacities as a people,” Humphrey said. Striking out at the Eisenhower administration, the Minnesota sen ator charged “soft thinking.” Rather than the “so-called Soft living of the American people” leading to the present crisis in our world position, Humphrey charged All to Registration Begins In January Students wishing to register their automobiles on the campus for the spring semester may do so anytime after the Christmas Holi days, Campus Security Chief Fred Hickman said yesterday. If the student knows in which area he will live during the sec ond semester, he may register fol lowing the holidays and avoid the great rush on registration, he said. it has been “the soft thinking of our leadership,” Humphrey accused the adminis tration of guiding its foreign and domestic policy by supedstitions. “Perhaps the greatest supersti tion they have today is that our military or our scientists can win this great 20th century battle for humanity by sole concentration on missiles and anti-missile-missiles and anti-anti-missile-missile-mis- siles,” he said. Humphrey charged another ad ministration myth to be “that the American people are currently so preoccupied with enjoying their material wealth that they cannot be galvanized into action for the long pull ahead.” The Minnesota Democrat refuted this myth saying: “We are ready to buckle down, once we know the task before us.” He pointed out another super stition deluding the Administration which assumes “that the American people want to be fooled, like to be reassured that all is well, wish to be told that minimum effort achieves maximum results.” Humphrey said another super stition is “that the political risks required by effective leadership are too great.” “The assumption is that the op position to foreign a,id is so strong that it is better not to ask for what is really needed, for, say, a size able loan to India right now,” Humphrey said. He said that the assumption is that the pro-tariff forces are so strong that we cannot get, and therefore will not go all-out to en list support foi’, the long-term trade policies that our leadership role requires. “The assumption is that the strength of ultra-isolationist groups in this country is still so strong that nothing bold should be proposed to consolidate NATO po litically and culturally,” the sen ator said. • “I question the validity of these assumptions,” Sen. Humphrey said. “I think they are superstitions chiefly useful as excuses • for in action and timidity by our govern ment.” Unof f icial V ote Shows Street Repair Wanted School Lock-up Schedules Set For Holidays All dormitories with the ex ception of Bizzell Hall and Ramp C of Hart Hall will be locked for the Christmas holi days at 2 p.m. Saturday and will remain closed until noon, Jan. 4. Students living in other dorms who need accommodations over the holidays must arrange to borrow a room from residents of Bizzell or Ramp C in Hart . To secure these rooms, students are required to bring a signed note of permission to the Housing Of fice in the YMCA before 5 p. m. Friday. College dining halls will close after the evening meal Saturday and won’t open until the evening meal on Sunday, Jan. 5. The Memorial Student Center locks its doors after the noon meal Saturday and will be closed until 8:30 a. m. Dec. 30. It will also be closed on New Years Day. All students are urged to close the windows and lock the doors of their rooms before leaving the cam pus. Anyone living on the ground floor should also lock his windows. If anyone has to get into a dorm for a good reason during the holidays, he will have to check with the Housing Office. Anyone unable to meet the above schedules should see his tactical officer or dorm counselor. The library will be closed Dec. 22-25, Dec. 29, Jan. 1 and Jan 4-5. On other days, it will be open from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. except for Dec. 28, when it stays open from 8 a. m. till noon. The Western Union Office in the MSC will close only on Dec. 22, 25, 29 and Jan. 1. It will observe a regular schedule during the other days, except Dec. 21 and 28, when it is open from 8 a. m. till noon only. Surovik Rebukes Charge of Neglect Student Senators were justified Dec. 5 in commending the Board of The Big Four —Battalion Staff Photo Charles Smith, commander of the Ross Vol unteers, and Jay Bisbey, vice chairman of SCONA III, stand in line with represents^ tives of the three other US military academies at the Corps review Friday. Ca dets from West Point, midshipmen from An napolis and cadets from the Air University were among the 150 delegates to SCONA III held on the campus last week. Directors’ action making military training compulsory, Student Sen ate President Bobby Surovik said last night. “The Senate was justified be cause they were elected at large from the student body and obvious ly represent the students most in terested in campus affairs,” Surovik said. Surovik pointed out that Sen ators are elected at large by classes from the four academic schools, yet only five of the 30 members are civilian. Three of these are the representatives from the School of Veterinary Medicine, one is the vice president of the Civilian Student Council (an ex-officio position) and one from the Graduate School. The Civilian Council wrote a letter to Surovik, “requesting that he remind senators that they are elected to represent the entire stu dent body, regardless of personal feelings.” He rebuked the Civilian Student Council’s charge that the Senate had neglected their duty to repre sent the entire student body. “As Dean Kamm charged us in our first meeting this year, we are more than parrots of changing majority opinion; rather we are the student body’s elected repre sentatives.” Improvement Plan Favored by 11-2 BY GAYLE McNUTT Voting unofficially, 17 citizens attending a special called College Station City Council meeting Friday night favored a city wide street improvement plan by a vote of 11 to 2, with 4 abstaining. What was termed “a good cross section opinion” was obtained by the Council Friday night as the citizens met with them to discuss repair and costs for improving city streets. The meeting was called by Mayor Ernest Langford to discuss the proposed plans of street improvement and ways of financing the work. Citizens were asked to come to the meeting and express their views on the matter. “This council is concerned only with what the people +want done,” Langford said. ¥• /'ll 1 ¥ ¥ “We are assuming the respon- Lions Club Hears Professor Wilson Kruger National Park, the world’s lai’gest wildlife sanctuary, was the subject of Dr. Basil W. Wilson’s talk to the College Station Lions yesterday. Wilson lived in the Union of South Africa, the park’s location, before coming to the United States in 1952. He is a professor in the A&M’s Department of Oceano graphy and Meteorology. Showing films of wildlife he had taken in the sanctuary, he told the Lions about the characteristics and geography of the park. Located northeast of the Trans vaal province, bordering Mozam bique, it is 200 miles long and 40 miles wide, the area being 8400 square miles. Thousands of animals, chiefly lions, giraffe, elephants, hippos, buffalos, zebras and antelopes, live in the park. Hunting is prohibi ted, but visitors may enter the park each year between June 16 and Oct. 15, Wilson said. M. L. (Red) Cushion reported the Lion Christmas tree sale was going “exceedingly well”. He said there were plenty of trees and dec orations left for late buyers. Final Paym ent Due Fourth and final installment fees must be paid in the Fiscal Office by Friday to avoid pen alty. The $45.60 fee covers cost of room rent, board and laundry until the end of the semestefr. sibility for gathering informa tion and data on what we think they will want.” “We will mail each citizen a complete plan of all the informa tion we have and let him know exactly what we propose and how much it will cost him before it is voted on,” he said. “Then it will be up to the people to decide whether they want the plan or not.” At the end of the meeting, Coun cilman Joe Orr asked for the vote among the citizens present, asking whether they were in favor of such a citywide street improvement as proposed after discussing the plan with the council. During the meeting, the council discussed three primary questions: 1) What kind of streets are to be built. 2) How will they be paid for. 3) Which streets will be desig nated primary thoroughfares. The council unanimously agreed that any street improvement plan should coincide with the plan being constructed by the Area Planning Commission. They also agreed that curbs and gutters would be a de finite advantage. The entire building project would cost an estimated $1,129,000. Of this amount, the city would pay about $500,000, or 40 percent, and property owners would pay the re maining 60 percent. Streets would be paved on a one-third system, property owners on each side of the street paying for the third nearest them and the city paying for the center third. The city would also pay for paving intersections. Pro perty owners would have to pay for curbs and gutters, if installed. Students Form Original Club For Advertising The A&M Chapter of the Students Advertising Associa tion of Texas, one of the first such chapters in the State, held its official inaugural meetings recently. Toby Mattox was elected presi dent and Gary Brooks was chosen vice president. Jim Sparks was voted secretary and Rober Week- ley promotional manager. Composed primarily of business administration and journalism majors, the chapter was organized to further the interest of advertis ing and to strive to have an ad vertising major put into the cur riculum. The chapter will have its next meeting Wednesday night at 7:30 in Nagle Hall where a 16mm color movie on national advertising will be shown. This movie, costing $20,- 00, was made in’Hollywood by the Bureau of Advertising. It has had formal premiers over the entire nation. At the meeting Wednesday night plans will be completed for the coming state meeting and seminar of the association to be held at A&M. The chapter urges all persons interested in advertising, those thinking of changing their majors, and those who do not yet have a major, to come to the meeting. Chest Drive Figure Standing at $750 Total collections to date for the Senate sponsored Campus Chest is $750, with only three days of solicitation left. Solicitation Chairman Charlie (Woody) Rice said last night that he had received no contributions from the Second Wing or from the Civilian students' as of yet. In an effort to reach day stud- dents and others not personally contacted, Rice said buckets will be placed in the Memorial Student Center for those who wish to con tribute. Chest goal was set at $7,000—a dollar per Ag. Crow’s Trophy on Display — Battalion Staff Photo The trophy that made Aggie halfback John dent Center. Jarrin’ John received the “na- Crow famous and brought recognition to tion’s best collegiate football player” award A&M is now on display in the Memorial Stu- in New York last week.