Weather Today Clear to partly cloudy and wanner through Wednesday. THE BATTALION Published Daily on the Texas A&M College Campus Number 92: Volume 58 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 1959 Price Five Cents < .t Hill Will Head 11-Man Team For Inspection iii, \ ' ..... . ... Civilian Sweetheart Tina Bratton expresses her thanks for being represented the Apartment Council and was selected as the “Civilian Ball Sweetheart” during the sixth annual Civilian Ball in Sbisa Hall Saturday night. Mrs. Bratton escorted by Bill Bratton. On her right is Joyce Poston, Hart, and on her left, Jo Anna Carlo, Leggett. Banquet Honors CHS Grid Team Members of the 1958 A&M Con solidated High School football team, their guests and coaches were honored with a banquet by College Station Businessmen last night in the Fellowship Hall of the A&M Presbyterian Church. The Consolidated Tigers were Champions of Dist. 21-AA in 1958. Master of ceremonies for the occasion was M. L. (Red) Cashion, College Station insurance man. Special guests for the occasion were college athletic officials and four Aggie football players. After a meal of barbecued chicken, the group was entertain ed by Bob Huffaker and Skip Con ner who presented novelty acts. Speakers for the occasion were Jack Pardee, all-American full back during the 1956 football sea son and Charlie Milstead, all-SWC back last season. Milstead spoke on the similarit ies between high school and college football. He ' told the group that both college and high school play ers should have the characteristics of desire, courage and discipline, all being necessary not only on the football playing field, but in life as well. Pardee told the audience that college and professional football wei’e more alike than different. Certain traits such as desire, sac rifice and competition are present and necessary in each category. The difference in college and professional football, Pardee ex plained, included length of foot ball season played, pay, workouts, specialization or concentration on one position and more spare time. Photographer Gets Headliners Award Gene Dennis of the Bryan Daily Eagle recently won the National Headliners Club Award for the best feature picture of the year in American Newspapers, a photo graph of a Bryan Negro putting pennies in a parking meter where he had hitched his horse and wag- The photograph, entitled “Para dise Lost”, cited by the Associated Press Managing Editors meeting at Corpus Christi also won the Sweepstakes Award of the Texas Headliners Club in Austin earlier this year. wBk ilia# * ? ! #lfp , if KfwSSiS — aigpij litl* if#; Mmm m gWMWi m ■ . IfPilB Jiff; it i: mwmm I .j wMi Aggie Captain Speaks Charlie Milstead, All-SWC back on the ’58 Aggie football team, makes a point during his speech to the A&M Con solidated football team at a banquet honoring them last night. The banquet was given by a group of College Station businessmen. Ike, Macmillan End Conference WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Eisenhower and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan ended their three-day strategy confer ence Monday by agreeing it was the best they ever had. The two old friends reviewed their decision to offer the Soviet Union’s Premier Nikita Khrush chev a summertime summit meet ing during a farewell 30-minute White House talk. As he prepared to fly back to London Tuesday, Macmillan was reported advocating a sei-ies of informal summit conferences with Khrushchev as the surest way to ease tensions inflaming East-West relations. The British leader was under stood to be opposed to Geneva as a site. He favored a more se cluded spot to try to avoid the glare of worldwide publicity. Referring to his talks with Ei senhower, Macmillan said as he left the White House: “It was the best conference we ever had in the most enjoyable surrounding.” Presidential press secretary James Hagerty said Eisenhower sharded Macmillan’s view equally. Hagerty said Eisenhower enjoyed informal-intimate talks of the kind he had with Macmillan, For eign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd and half a dozen other top British aides. Messhalls to Become Place to Eat Only Annual Field Trip Scheduled by Ags Twelve students and faculty members from A&M are expected to attend the annual field trip of the Texas Herpetological Society, a group of amateurs and profes sionals interested in the study of reptiles and amphibians, this weekend. Site of the meet will be the 65,000-acre area of Devils River, located 70 miles northwest of Del Rio. Headquarters will be lo cated on the Fawcett family ranch where the group will live in tents. Saturday at 5 p.m. the society will have its annual dinner and business meeting, after which they will hunt specimens. The fol lowing morning there will be an exhibit and awards will be given to the top two collectors. Richard Bauldouf, assistant professor in the Department of Wildlife Management, is president of the society which is composed of 90 members. Col. Robert J. Hill Jr. will head an 11-man Army inspection team for the annual formal and gerieral inspection of the Corps of Cadets April 23-25. Hill is a member of the staff and faculty of the U. S. Army Artillery and Missile Center, Fort Sill, Okla. He has been in the Army since June, 1939, following his graduation from the U. S. Mil itary Academy. He completed the Command and General Staff Col lege in 1950, the Armed Forces Staff College in 1954 and the Army War College in 1956. During World War II, Col. Hill served in the European Theatre of Operations as commanding officer of the 180th Field Artillery Bat talion of the 26th Infantry Divi sion. He was awarded the Silver Star, the Bronze Star and the Legion of Merit. The team is expected to arrive at 3 p.m. April 22. Members to comprise the inspection team will cheefly be several officers from Fourth Army Headquarters, Fort Sam Houston. Those expected to arrive with the team are Col. Hill) Lt. Col. John C. Allan, GS (Armor); Maj. George H. Worf, Artillery, regu lar team member; Lt. Col. Walter C. Henderson, Engineer Section; Maj. Festus E. Harrison, Chemical Section; Col. Charles Askins, Ord nance Section; Maj. Fred W. Dol lar, Quartermaster Section; Lt. Col. Gerald M. Cravens, Signal Section; Lt. Col. Gordon F. Tyr rell, Transportation Section; Lt. Col. Harold M. Kennedy, GS (In fantry), Combat Arms; and Capt. Arthur J. White, Army Aviation Section. Not Training Area, Davis Tells CO’s By JOE BUSER , Battalion Editor Corps commanders were told Saturday by Col. Joe E. Davis that “effective Tuesday the messhalls will be used for what they were designed—eating.” Putting the finishing touches to a month-long campaign against “tension” in the Corps dining areas, the comman dant outlined the practices which would be authorized in the future. . . “Freshmen will continue to give meal service—they do it at home; they may wear napkins in their collar if the men want it and they will continue to sit erect. No one will as sume the exaggerated position on the front of the chair, how ever,” Col. Davis said. + The commandant said that in general the commanders Consolidated Gives Play Tonight at 8 “January Thought”, a three-act comedy by William Ross, will be presented tonight at 8 in the school auditorium by the A&M Consolidated junior class. The play, set in a Connecticut farmhouse, depicts the struggle of two families living in the same house. The Gage family has moved in and redecorated the house when the original owners, the Rock- woods, decide to move back in. Sarah Gage is played by Judy Rasmussen and Herbert Gage is played by Kelly Parker, Paula, Barbara and MargA Ga£e are hall activities. played by Yvonne Parker, Dorothy Berry and Ann Elkins respectively. Janis Card plays Freida. Geoi’ge Husted is portrayed by Dee Smith and Jonathan Rock- wood by Ben Jackson. Rockwood’s wife, Matilda, is played by Anne Rudder. Uncle Walter is played by Joel Mills and Matt Rockwood by Larry Godfrey. Carson is portrayed by Jimmy Holland and Loomis is played by Brennar Sayers. Admission charge for the play is 50 cents for students, 75 cents for adults. C S Woman Wins % ‘ i' Award in Contest Mrs. I. Walker Rupel, 305 Col lege View Street, Bryan, is the re cipient of a pair of boots from the Madisonville Sidewalk Cattlemen’s Assn, for suggesting a topic for their letter writing contest. Mrs. Rupel was presented the boots at the College Station Lions Club meeting Monday as the local Lions played host to a delegation from the cattlemen’s association. The group made a special trip to College Station to present the award. Mrs. Rupel’s entry in the con test, which is limited to Alaskans only, was a suggestion that Alas kans write a letter on “Why I Am Living In Alaska.” The inhabitants of the biggest state in the Union who writes the best letter on this topic will be flown to Texas as a honor guest of the Sidewalk Cattlemen at their barbecue and rodeo the first Fri day and Saturday in June, accord ing to Bill Andrews, president of the Madisonville Sidewalk Cattle men’s Assn. “We’re just going to let big Alaska have her say—then, when the winner gets to Texas, we’ll be set to show why we like living in the second largest state,” And rews said. “And this isn’t to say that Alaska isn’t top-shelf, it self. We just want to show an Alaskan Texas.” Mrs. Rupel, who has been to Alaska, said, “Now that I have lived in Texas since August, 1957, experiencing the wonderfud friend liness here, I should love to have the opportunity to greet the Alas kan who wins'and tell him (or her) about Texas.” Mrs. Rupel will have that op portunity as she, too, will be an honor guest at the Madisonville celebration June 5 and 6. She mov ed to Texas from Illinois. were to cease to use Duncan and Sbisa as training areas. “We have time set aside for underclassmen to study and to sleep. As it is now, they don’t have any time for eating,” the com mandant said. He pointed out that the entire philosophy about the messhall was wi’ong. “We’re getting a different kind of man that we used to—he comes from a changing world,” Col. Dav is said. Before outlining the changes, the colonel agreed that some units had “cleaned their own houses’'’ and were not concerned with the new regulation concerning mess- He acknowledged that “many cadets will be unhappy but said he wasn’t “worried about any of you (commanders).” “You men may not agree com pletely but you will do now as you will do when you get into service as A&M men have done in the. past—when you receive a di rective you will carry it out,” Col. Davis promised. In answer to questions from the floor, Davis, later said the “cush” questions were to be abolished. He noted that necessary corrections in meal procedure could be made during the meal but dessert would be given each man without' quiz zing. Formations Optional > Outlining other changes, the commandant told the Go’s that “in the future any man may be ex cused from Reveille if he is up late studying or for any other good excuse.” He also made a suggestion that the cottimanders think about mak ing call to quarters on a voluntary basis so long as the men kept their grades high. City Council Plans to Start Street Work Plans for the first ordinance, which authorizes the city engineer to prepare plans and specifications on assessment of city street con struction, were formulated in the City Council meeting last night. City Attorney C. E. Dillion told Council members the ordinance would be completed shortly and could be officially issued in the next council meeting. Dillion also said from 60 to 90 days will be required to complete all. legal work before actual construction can be gin. This construction will, begin at the intersection of Foster and Walton, continue to Kyle street and then down to Highway 6. Also the Council voted to refer the second installment of Woodson Village to the city planning group through City Engineeer Fred Ben son. The Council then adopted Ordi nance No. 279 to limit parking to six hours on both sides of Boyett St. between Church Ave. ?md Farm to Market Highway 60. Mayor Ernest Langford present ed a sketch plan for additional of fice space in City Hall for Council meetings. The plan is for an office to seat 60 people. Also on the agenda, the Council authorized the expenditure of $2,- 950 for the purchase of a ditching machine. Argue Talks Tonite In All-Faith Chapel Rev. James Argue, pastor of the College Station First Methodist Church, will present a talk in the All-Faith Chapel at the Holy Week Vesper Service tonight from 7:15- 7:45 p.m. ^ Rev. Agrue will speak on the subject “Is It Nothing to You . . . All You That Pass.” 1 J. Gordon Gay, co-ordinator of religious life, urged all istudents to spend a half-hour in worship and self examination so that they may be spiritually prepared for the coming Easter. Guide Posts The biggest reward for a thing well done is to have done it—Ralph Waldo Emerson Receives Mrs. I. Walker Rupel of Bryan happily re ceives a pair of boots from Bill Andrews, president of the Madisonville Sidewalk Cat- Boots tlemen’s Assn. Mrs. Rupel became the re cipient of the boots for suggesting a topic for the association’s letter writing contest.