The Battalion Number 84: Volume 54 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1955 Price Five Cents Students Planning Activities For Civilian Weekend In May THE CHORALETTES ARE COMING — Lamar high school of Houston will send its 130 member all-girl chorus to the talent-studded variety show, “In the Pink,” scheduled for 8 p.m. Thursday in the G. Rollie White coliseum. The Lamar Choralettes are under the direction of Lee S. Keding and feature Carol Kinney at the piano. Given in appre ciation of P. L. (Pinky) Downs jr., the two hour show will present top-flight talent to the crowd expected to fill the coliseum. By Next September Library Change Announced By next September, the library frill be rearranged for the conve- Sjenee of the students, according to Robert A. Houze, librarian. The changes are being made gradually, in conjunction with the air conditioning that is being in- Lions Sponsor Circus Here Saturday Hagen Brothers three-ring circus, featuring clowns, ac robats, a band, pretty girls, elephants, lions, apes and chimpanzies, will be here Sat urday. The matinee will start at 3 p.m. In order that A&M students taking part in the Militax-y day parade may attend. The circus is sponsored here by the College Station Lions club and will be held at the traffic circle on Sulphur Springs Rd. on prop erty donated by J. C. Culpepper, Bi'yan real estate man. Admission will be 50 cents for school children and $1.20 for adults. Tickets may be obtained from any Lions club member. Profits from the show will go into the club fund for crippled children, boy scout work, school awards, and other Lions club proj ects. Clowns featured with the circus include Speed Hart, producing clown; John Maseno, Shorty Blair and Fx-anky King. The cix-cus will be hex-e one day only, with the afternoon matinee and an evening show starting at 7:30. stalled, he said. Houze estimated it would be about Apxnl 1 befoi’e the air conditioning is complete. One of the changes in the bxxild- ing will be the moving of the re serve and x'equii'ed reading to the fii'st floor. This is where people go the most, Houze said. Also on the first floor, there will be one lax’ge loom for popular pe- xfodicals, and the newspapers will be left in the lobby, he said. “There will be all new furniture on the fii'st floor much like the Memox-ial Student Center,” he ex plained. “We want to make it in viting.” Houze said the worn out furni ture in the building will also be replaced, and the total cost of the furniture will be $23,000. On the second floor, after the project is completedy will be the main loan desk and the reference room. There will be an annex to the reference room for the scienti fic and agricultural periodicals, he said. The thix’d floor will be for the cataloging and order department, and also for the browsing room. which is there now, Houze said. Study tables and more stuffed chairs will be added to the brows ing room, making it into “an air conditioned study hall,” accoi’ding to Houze. “We have been planning these changes for a number of years,” he said. “We are getting them done gradually while things are tom up for the air conditioning installa tion.” After the project is finished, thei’e will be a seating increase of about 150 chairs for the readers, Houze said. “And with the air conditioning, we’ll need the extra chairs,” he added. CS Kiwanians Hear Choir From Bry an Etiquette Program Is At 7:30 Tonight The second of the series on etiquette, “Table Manners and Food Techniques,” will be given at 7:30 tonight by Mrs. Ross Sherwood of Bryan in the Me morial Student Center ballroom. The program will be a demon stration on a buffet dinner, for mal dinner and other occasions which come up when one Ls a guest. The etiquette series is present ed by the MSC’s “Mind Your Manners” committee. The Acapella choir from Kemp high school in Bryan entertained the College Sta tion Kiwanis club at their luncheon yesterday in the Me morial Student Center. Songs in cluded “Hallelujah, Praise Ye the Loxd;” “Hallelujah Choxais,” fi-om “The Messiah;” “Shortening Bi’ead;” and “Dry Bones.” Next Tuesday, the club will have as its guest the governor of the Texas-Oklahoma district of Kiwa nis clubs, J. N. Walker, and the Lieutenant governor of the district, Jess Petty, who is superintendent of schools at Burnett. For the meetixxg the local club will host visitors from Kiwanians of Navasota, Conroe, Huntsville, Bx-yan, Cameixm and Temple. Price for the pancake supper project, jointly sponsored by the College Station Kiwanis club and the Bx-yan Kiwanians April 16, was announced as 50 cents by W. E. Bx-iles, co-chairman of the supper. The Bryan co-chairman is R. J. Holmgi-een, with B. J. Lloyd and D. S. Hammonds to assist him. Tickets will go on sale next Tuesday, and may be bought from any Kiwaniaxr. The supper will be held in the Biyan Country club fx*om 12 noon to 9 p.m. SILVER TAPS — Silver Taps was held last night for Billy John Mount, sen ior accounting major from Crystal City, who was killed Sunday night when he ap parently fell asleep at the wheel of his car. Barbecue, Two Contests Included in Festivities Definite plans were proposed yesterday for the Civilian Student weekend May 12-14 by representatives from each of the civilian dormitories. The group decided to have two contests during the fes tivities—an ugly man contest and the beard growing contest. Committees were formed to draw up definite rules for the contests and were instructed to report at the group’s next meeting, Tuesday. The weekend will begin Thursday, May 12, with a “yell practice’’ which will serve as a kickoff for the other activities. It will be held from 7:15 to 7:30 p.m. Hugh Lanktree, chairman of the group, said there was ♦a possibility that a tug-of-war over a mud puddle would be held. Dr. David H. Morgan, president of the college has approved of the idea, accord ing to Lanktree. Barbecue Friday Friday night, May 13, a civilian bai’becue will be held from 6:30 to 7:30. Sevex-al groups have agx*eed to furnish entertainment for the bai'becue, Lanktree reported. Also at this time, the beard growing contest will be judged. Stax-ting date for the beai’d grow ing contest was set as April 6. Dance Saturday The first Civilian ball will be held Satuxday, May 14, in the Grove. This dance, which was pro posed by the Civilian Student Coun cil, has been set for 9 p.m. to mid night, and music will be furnished by the Capers Combo. The ugly man contest will also be judged at the dance, and the committee will select judges. En trants fox’ the ugly man contest will be selected fi’om each civilian dormitory, and the winner will be picked fi'om the finalists. Ten Present Pi’esent at the meeting and the dox-mitory each represented were R. M. Hillman, Hai-t; H. C. Wilcox, Mitchell; R. M. Putnam, Milner; W. M. Kax*r, Walton; H. Weaver, Leggett; Stew Coffman, Pur-year; and Louis McCarthy, Bizzell. Also px-esent from the Civilian Student Council besides Lanktree were John Jones, president, and John Cozad, vice-president. House Passes Bill For Building Fund The proposed constitutional amendment that would give A&M and the Univei’sity of Texas more building money passed the Texas house yestei-day with flying colors —a vote of 136 to 6. The preposed amendment, which will now go to state senate, calls for broadening the base on invest ment for the permanent fund. The income frem the permanent fund is xrsed for buildings for the two schools, one-third of it going to A&M and two-thii'ds to the uni versity. E. L. Angell, system vice-chan cellor, said that the senate would probably consider the proposal in about 10 days. News of the World By The ASSOCIATED PRESS MOSCOW—The Soviet government named Vassily Kuz netsov as replacement for the late Andre Vishinsky as first deputy foreign minister. Kuznetsov worked at the Ford plant in the Detroit area in the early thirties as one of thous ands of exchange students. ★ ★ ★ HAWAII—A big navy transport plane ferrying passengers from Japan to California crashed in Hawaii, killing all aboard—66 persons—including a woman and a child. ★ ★ ★ LONDON—British Prime Minister Winston Churchill has described as “chatter in the press” reports that he is being urged to retire by his fellow conservatives. Combat Ball Slates Invasion Of Sbisa Hall A force of about 800 A&M students, their dates, and Mil itary day guests will invade Sbisa hall Friday night for the fourth annual Combat ball. The Aggielaixd orchestra, featur ing Rocky Arnold as vocalist, will play for the dance fx-om 8 a.m. un til 12. Admission to the dance will be free to all members of the combat aims. Air force and service seniors may get passes to the dance outside Duncan and Sbisa halls after Wed nesday evening meal formation for a $1 contribution to the combat aims fund, said Dave Williams, ticket chairman. The program committee will se lect a group from the artillery, axmor, infantry, and engineer units to perform for a 40-minute inter mission show stax-ting at 9 p.m. Military guests will dress as prisoners of war, and civilian guests as displaced persons. Ca dets will wear fatigues and helmet liners. Combat and jump boots are optional. Their dates will dress as French peasants. The amendment, if passed by the senate then the people of the state, would allow 50 per cent of the permanent fund to be invested in corpox-ate stocks, as it is now, and the other 50 per cent in specified stocks of other types, w-ith a higher interest rate. The increase in interest is esti mated at about 1 per cent, or about $2 million a year. The amendment also calls for A&M and the university taking over support of the four schools in their systems, instead of these schools being supported by the 5 cent ad valox-em tax. Then two schools would be added to the ad valox-em tax supported group, mak ing 12 schools there instead of the px-esent 14. The higher education institutions, W'ho px-oposed the amendment, be lieve it would px-ovide increased suppox-t for all colleges. Soph Sweetheart Deadline Nears Fxiday is the last day that sopho more’s can turn in jxictures for Sophomore Sweetheart. They should be turned into student ac tivities office, second floor of Goodwin hall, before 5 p.m. Pictux-es may be any size, and all will be returned. Five finalists will be picked from the group, and the sweetheax-t will be chosen at the dance. All sophomores who have not made their class donation of $1 should do so, said Durward Thomp son, genex-al chairman for the dance. Seniors with dates who wish to attend may donate $1 to the class fund at the student ac tivities offce, he said. The dance will be in the Grove, April 2 and Buddy Brock’s orches- tx-a fx-om Houston will play from 8 p.m. to 12. Chainnen for the dance and their committees are Jack Steele and Carl Wagner, sweetheart; Glen Chandler, ticket; Leon Curtis, program; L. E. Sheppard, guest; Jon Cobb and Bob Yeager, decor ations; and Buck Williams, pub licity. To Be Honored Tomorrow No Aggie Will Ever Forget ‘Pinky’ By HARRI BAKER Battalion Co-Editor No Aggie will ever fox-get him at All-College nights — the big ^white hat, the bright x-ed shirt, and the tie tox-n off and thrown out to the crowd. Then he stax-ts talking about A&M, and no one has a doubt that the Aggies are indeed going to wdn the next one, and all the following ones. That’s Pinky — P. L. Downs jx-., official greeter, former member of the board of dii-ectoi-s, and the man to be honox-ed tomorrow night by the “In the Pink” variety show at 8 p.m. in the White coliseum. Pinky has been called “the most enthusiastic Aggie of them all,” and he will talk about A&M at the drop of a hat. Besides being the main speaker at All-College nights and the annual Thanksgiving bon fire, he has spoken to countless A&M club meetings thi-oughout the state. “Just get me there,” he says, bx-ushing aside any prepared talk. He once spoke over a national broadcast hookup — on the spirit of Aggieland, of coxu-se—and he x-eceived $83.33 a minute for the talk. Pinky also does many good deeds out of the public light. Each year he collects fi-uit from the students and faculty and sends it to the patients at the Temple veterans hospital. He also is responsible for bx-inging as many of these vet- ex-ans as possible to A&M football games. Weather Today CLEAR and COOL The w-eather outlook for today is continued fair w-ith little change in temperature. Yestei'day’s high was 59, low 39. The temperature at 11 this morn ing w as 61. And he has quietly helped a lot of Aggies stay in school. A descendent of the pioneer Downs family of Temple, Pinky entex-ed A&M in 1902. After four years here, he went back to Temple to work in his uncle’s bank. He w-as a member of the board of directors fx-om 1923 to 1932. The pi’esent board passed a x-esolution honoring him on his 71st birthday, Feb. 26, 1955. On the campus, he has worked for the fiscal department, the ath letic department, and the informa tion and publications department. His present job is official gx-eetex-. Legends about Pinky are — there’s the one about the ma roon and white radishes he grows in the gai'den behind his house, just a stone’s throw fx-om the cam pus. Then there’s the story about the state’s largest indoor swimming pool, the P. L. Downs jr. natator- ium. It was originally planned to be 100 feet long, but Pinky heard that the pool at the University of Texas w-as 100 feet long. So he had the blueprints of A&M’s pool changed to make it 101 feet long. And the time he was attending a funeral. “Does anyone have any thing to say about the deceased?” Sigma Xi To Have Lecturer Thursday Sigma Xi will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Biological Sciences lecture x-oom. Daniel Mazia of the Universit3’ of California will discuss “The Life History of the Cell.” He is a na tional lecturer for the society, and is on a lecture tour of a number of colleges and universities. All faculty members, staff and graduate students are urged to at tend. The meeting is open to the public. asked the minister. No one said anything. Then Pinky spoke up: “If no one has anything to say about the deceased, I’d like to say a few- woi*ds about Texas A&M.” The thumbs-up “Gig ’em. Ag gies” admonition is said to have been invented by Pinky, and cer tainly he is the leading exponent of its use. The cry is a throw back to the old days here, when de- mei-its, now called ‘Tams, wrere called “gigs.” Mi's. Dowms is a charming, mothex-ly, aristocratic w-oman; she and Pinky have a daughter Grey, who was Miss Texas Centennial in 1930, and is now employed at the Exchange store. is also a ^lason and a member of the Methodist church. “I pray,” he says. Before going to bed at night, he says he utters this prayer, “Lord, take care of the Aggies tonight— P. L. (Pinky) Downs jr. ‘Most Enthusiastic of All’