0 .®-.rVt?Oe^ ZO^’K Vie® 0 " '’fpg 3 co'? 1 ' 63 Cimilatod to |>^ J " More Than 90% of College Station’s Residents Battalion What Does MSO Do? What Is Its Purpose? See Story, Editorial Page PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF A GREATER A&M COLLEGE Number. 123.: Volume 51 COLLEGE STATION (Aggieland), TEXAS, MONDAY, APRIL 2, 1951 Price Five Cents City Officials Sign Contracts For Electricity By JOEL AUSTIN Battalion City Editor Tie City of College Station be- eame owner of electrical facilities in College Hills Friday afternoon, climaxing attempts by local author ities for more than five years to obtain the lines. Mayor Ernest Langford of Col lege Station and Mayor Roland Danlby of Bryan signed the con tract which has been eight months in the making. Bryan and the Rural Electrification Administra tion! jointly owned the power lines in this East side area of College Station. The REA office in Washington, D.C|approved the sale of the lines recently and their okey on the con tract drawn up between the two cities was received by Bryan offi cials Friday. Signatures of Langford and As sistant City Secretary Nestor Mc Ginnis of College Station, and •Pansby, City Manager H. A. Thom ason and City Secretary Noah Dansby of Bryan made the docu ment official. After the contract was signed, Langford presented the Bryan authorities a check for $.'18,109.37, the. sale price agreed upon in the contract. * Water Contract In another contract between the officials of the two cities, it was agreed that College Station would purchase water and electric power from the City of Bryan for a per iod of five years,\ with College Station retaining option for re newing or discontinuing that agree ment at the end of five years. The electric power will be sold to College Station for one cent per kilowatt hour, with a charge of 13 and one-half cents per thousand gallons for the water. “1 believe this sale of power lines by Bryan will do well to establish a lasting friendship between the two neighboring cities and will serve as a basis for future trans actions which both may be involved in,” was the mayor’s comment con cerning the power line purchase. The power lines will beconie the property of College Station April 15, with the much cheaper local rates for domestic power to go into effect at that time. Langford said although commer cial rates in College Station are Engineers to Hear Chevalier Tonight ... Col. Willard Chevalier will meet with the Student Engineers Coun cil'tonight at 7:30 in the MSC and ’peak on the subject, “The Defense -f America.” T.He will be on the campus all week and will' speak at noon, Tues day, to the Kiwanis Club on the present world situation, and at 7 pan. in the Assembly Hail to the freshmen. . I On Friday, in the Chemistry lec ture room, he will present a lecture to which students, faculty, and the general public are invited. Commentator Special Meeting Called Tonite A special meeting of The Com- mentator staff will be held tonight at 7:30 in Goodwin Hall, accord ing to George Charlton and Her man Gollob, co-editors. | Plans will be discussed for the upcoming May issue, and pictures of the staff for The Aggieland will be taken. slightly higher than charged pre viously in College Hills by Bryan, a study will be made immediately to adjust charges for business con sumers. Work will begin today on a new line to parallel the existing REA line now running through the city, the mayor announced. This new power line will connect with the REA-Bryan high line at a point located near the intersection of Highway (i and Sulphur Springs Road. With the purchase of power from Bryan now, the college will be re lieved of its burden of supplying most of College Station with elec tric power. Only consumers souih of the college and at a few points around the North Gate will con tinue to use electricity from the college power plant. The mayor pointed out that fig ures computed by local officials show the City of College Station should realize additional profits of $1,300 to $1,700 each month Iron College Hills electrical facilities. Abbott to Head go c ,1'OUp Dr. J. P. Abbott, dean of the School of Arts and Sci ence, will serve as chairman of a work-study group at the sixth annual National Con ference on Higher Education to be held in Chicago today through Wednesday. The conference on higher educa tion is the largest annual gather ing of administration and faculty leaders from colleges and univer sities throughout the United States. “This year the problems to be considered grow out of the na tional emergency as higher educa tion prepares for a long range per iod of semi-mobilization,” Dean Abbott said. From Chicago, Dean Abbott will journey to San Antonio where he will attend the annual meeting of the Texas Junior College Associa tion Thursday and the annual meet ing of the Association of Texas Col leges Friday and Saturday. Since the association meetings are attended by junior college ad ministrators who also attend the annual junior college conference sponsored by A&M, Dean Abbott, as conference committee chairman, will consult with them regarding the program for this year’s con ference to be held October 8-9 in the MSC. Wanda is Selected A&M Cotton Queen for ’51 ‘Antigone 9 Begins Aggie Player Run When the curtain rises for the Aggie Players’ production of “An tigone” at- 8 tonight in the As sembly Hall, theater-goers will see a play that is neither entirely classic nor completely modem but a delightful blending of two re mote eras. “Antigone,” third episode in the tragic “Oedipux Rex” written by Sophocles 2400 years ago, ful fills the three unities of time, place and action traditional to the an cient Greek theater, but the actors will speak in modern dialogue in stead of the classical poetic form. All action of the drama takes place in one of the rooms of the royal palace of Thebes, and, in deference to the early Greeks, who used no scenery, the set has been designed with rigid simplicity. A gray cyclorama, exits flanked by fluted pillars, a table, two chairs and a low stool complete the stage furnishings, and onto this suggestively ancient scene will move the players in modem even ing dress. As the curtain rises all of the characters will be seen on the stage where they will remain until they have been introduced by the chorus. The chorus of Sophocles’ day, consisting of from 9 to 13 men, has been stream-lined for contemporary audiences to a single character and will be personified by Harry Gooding. Chorus Relates Story The audience will know from the start what the play is all about because it is the duty of the chorus to tell them. He will show them Antigone, the tragic heroine, (Mary Eleanor Vaden), her sister Ismene (Barbara Hodges), their nurse (Florence Farr), Creon, the relent less dictator, (Bill Guthrie), his wife, Eurydice, (Adele Gooding), his son, Haemon, (Jack Cockrum), the three guards (Carl Stephens, Bob Travis and John Caple), the messenger (David Haines), and the page (Donald Burchard). Miss Vaden, Mrs. Hodges and Mrs. Gooding will wear evening dresses of classic mode specially designed by Prof. C. K. Esten, fac ulty advisor to the Players, and made by Mrs. Esten. Miss Fair will appear in a conventional nurse’s uniform in gray, while' the men of the cast, with the excep tion of the page, will wear tuxe dos. Directed by Alice Burke Alice Burke has directed the play and the back-stage boss is M. C. “Pete” Carson with Donald Demke as assistant stage manager. Wanda Rohr, assisted by Elizabeth Cpowr, is responsible for the de signing of the set. Make-up artists Christine Oper- steny and Mary Carpenter, and lighting technicans Darwin Hodges and John Caple complete the pro duction crew. Publicity has been handled by Mrs. D. L. Belcher, radio, and Mrs. Donald D. Bur chard, newspaper. Tickets for the production, which will be repeated tomorrow night, are being sold by members of the AAUW with Mrs. Arthur Melloh in charge and are also available at the MSC. Admission price is 50 cents and there will be no reserved seats. Aggie Players’ season tickets will be honored for this play ac cording to Professor Esten. Freshman Beauty Chosen from 32 By BOP, HUGHSON Battalion Campus Editor Pretty blue-eyed, auburn-haired Wanda Harris, fresh man speech therapy student at TSCW, will reign as queen of the 17th Annual Cotton Pageant and Ball May 4. The Cotton Queen and her eight duchesses were selected by the King, Ray Kunze and his Court during a trip to the Denton College, Saturday and Sunday. Wanda, who hails from San Antonio, was a Redbud princess, and has been named a Freshman Class beauty. She also participated in the Children’s Theater and ranks in the upper one-third of her class. ^ The Freshman beauty is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clellan W. Harris of 1343 Ellsmere, San Antonio. She is five feet, five inches tall and tips the scale at 122 pounds. After being chosen as consort for King of Cotton, the San An tonio Tessie expressed complete surprise at being chosen. Her sel ection was the second time in the history of the cotton event that a freshman has been picked for the royal position. The Queen’s court will consist of Marilyn Fawcett who will be es corted by Bill Lewis; Ina Hubbard, escorted by Billy Gunter, Dorothy George with Don Hegi, and Paula Muller escorted by Bob Hill. Beverly Bazoni accompanied by Tommie Duffie; Joan Joplin with Tony Buckholt; Charlotte Williams escorted by George McBee, and Pa tricia Hapinstall with Dale Fisch- grabe will comprise the remainder of the royal family. Wanda Harris Raymond Kunze Polls Open at 8 A. M. Tomorrow Voters to Pick City Council Polls open at the City Hall to morrow morning at 8 for the an nual College Station municipal elec tion. Seven candidates will be seek ing one of the three vacancies on the council. All three of the in cumbents are running for re-elec tion. Homer Adams, incumbent H. W. Badgett, and J. W. O’Brien will vie for the Ward I position, while L. G. Berryman, G. W. Black, in cumbent, and Harry Boyer are the aspirants for councilmen from Ward II. Only W. D. Fitch, in cumbent from Ward III, will be unopposed in the election. Polls will close at 6 p.m. in com pliance with a state regulation which sets the hours of a munici pal election, city authorities said. L. E. Boze will be judge for the election, with Mrs. A. P. Boyett and Mrs. P. W. Burns appointed to serve as his assistants. Mayor Ernest Langford said this morning he expected the vote to exceed the total number of ballots cast in the election last year. Langford pointed out that he had heard several people discussing the upcoming vote and believed the heavy ballot in Wards I and II would cause more voters to visit the poll. Only the ballot box at the City Hall will be used for the entire city of College Station during the election. Voters will ballot on only the representative from their respective Wards. Ward I is the South section of College Station which includes Col lege Park, Oakwood, and West Park. Ward II is the College Hills and Woodland Estates addition in the East part of the city, while Ward II includes all citizens who live in and around the North Gate area. Councilmen elected to the three positions on the council will serve two year terms. Appreciation Tickets In Activities Office A new order of Guion Hall “ap preciation” tickets has arrived and may be obtained in the Student Activities office, second floor of Goodwin Hall, Eligible students who have not received their tickets for the 1950- 51 school year may receive them now, W. R. “Pete” Hardesty, Stu dent Activities business manager, said this morning. Felix Larkin Defense Talk In MSC Tonight Felix E. Larkin, general counsel of the U. S. Depart ment of Defense, will speak to students and faculty on “Cur rent Problems of Defense” to night at 8 in the MSC Ballroom. During the early part of his political career, Larkin served as Law Secretary to Judge James Wallace of the Court of General Sessions of New York County from 1939-47. In 1946, Larkin was vice presi dent of the Naval General Court- Martial Sentence Review Board, and in 1947 he became Assistant Counsel to the Senate War Inves tigating Committee. With Defense Secretary Joining the legal staff of the Office of of the Secretary of De fense in 1947, he was appointed As sistant General Counsel in 1948 by the late Secretary James For- restal. Former Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson appointed Larkin Associate- General Counsel in June 1949 and General Counsel of the Department of Defense in Septem ber of the same year. Larkin, as General Counsel, di rects the activities of the Office of Counsel and acts as the legal ad visor to the Secretary, the Deputy Secretary and the three Assistant Secretaries of Defense, and all of fices of the Office of Secretary of Defense and its boards, agencies, and committees. Larkin is a member of the bars of the Supreme Court of the Uni ted States and the Court of Ap peals of the State of New York. Fordham Graduate During his educational career as a student, Larkin received a Bache lor of Arts degree from Fordham University, where he later taught as a lecturer in law and finance. He also holds the degree of Mas ter . of Business Administration from the New York University Graduate School of Business, and the degree of Bachelor of Laws from St. Johns University. All interested students are in vited to attend his address which will be one of the leading ones on the program for “Arts and Sciences Week.” Thirty-two Candidates The Tessie portion of the Cotton Court was selected from a group of 32 nominees, eight from each of the four classes. The rest of the nominees, if they choose so, will be models in the Style Show. The King and his Courtiers ar rived in Denton Saturday for the selection after a stop in Dallas, where they were shown the Queen’s gown and had luncheon at Sanger’s which is spohsoringt he Style Show. The Court, accompanied by Eli Whiteley, faculty sponsor of the event and Mrs. Bill Turner, direct or of the pageant, were entertained by the nominees Saturday night with a dance and an informal re ception, during which time t h a judges were to meet and lay the basis for their selections. The final selection and naming of the Queen and the eight duches ses was held after the two groups attended Little Chapel services and had breakfast in Virginia Carroll Lodge. Vaughn Monroe To Salute A&M Vaughn Monroe and the Camel Caravan will give a “Salute to Tex as A&M” on their regular Satur day evening program May 19. The program, broadcast each Saturday night at 6:30, will feature traditional songs of A&M, includ ing “The Spirit of Aggieland” and “The Twelfth Man.” The Vaughn Monroe Orchestra and entertainers from the Camel Caravan furnished music and en tertainment for the first annual Military Ball here two years ago. Candidates for College Station Council Positions An Editorial Vote! V'ES.VOTE — Because you citizens of College Station numbered only approximately 170 voters when last year’s city council election was held. And that was out; of a near- 500 eligibility list. Tomorrow, from 8 a.m. till 6 p.m., the polls will be open at the City Hall. Make your c hoi c e s wisely and VOTE! Homer Adams Ward I Candidate H. VV. Badgett Ward I Candidate J. W. O’Brien Ward I Candidate L. G. Berryman Ward II Candidate G. VV. Black Ward II Candidate Harry Boyer Ward II Candidate W. D. Fitch Ward III Candidate