I The Battalion Number 23: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1955 Price Five Cents Big W eekend Progr an^Qpens T onight RANKING OFFICERS—Col. Joe E. Davis, commandant, congratulates Ernest F. Bie- hunko, newly named commander of the Ross Volunteers. Other cadet officers are Jack Barbee, left, administrative officer and Frank Westmoreland, executive officer. Por trait of Tactical Air Force Commander Gen. O. P. Weyland, former Ross Volunteer, looks on in the background. ‘Welcome’ Dances High l igh tA c ti vi ti es By RALPH COLE Battalion Managing Editor The welcome mat will be spread this weekend for the University of Houston Cougars, expected to start arriving on the campus late this afternoon. Byron (Scotty) Parham, Glen Buell, Gus Mijalis and Jack Edwards will leave for Houston early tomorrow morn ing to extend the Cougars a welcome from the A&M student body. They will speak at the Cougar “pep rally” tomorrow morning at 11. Rue Pinalle will launch the celebration tonight with a dance in the recreation area of the Memorial Student Center. Music will be provided by the Capers Combo featuring Sylvia Williams as vocalist. The traditional French at-f Biehunko Selected RV Commander Ernest F. Biehunko, senior in dustrial technology major from Moulton, has been selected 1955-56 commander of the Ross Volunteers, Col. Joe E. Davis, has announced. Traditionally the honor guard for the governor of Texas, the Vol unteers are selected from the Corps of Cadets on the basis of excel lence of character, military science training and scholastic achieve ment. During recent years the white- uniformed Ross Volunteers have served as honor guard Tor visiting dignitaries such as Pre.^ident Eis enhower, Army Chief of^taff Mat thew B. Ridgeway, Air Force Chief of Staff Nathan F. Twining and Tactical Air Force Commander O. P. Weyland, who was a member of the organization during his stu dent days at A&M in 1924. Company officers named in ad dition to Biehunko are Frank West moreland, executive officer; Jack Barbee, administrative officer; John Cunningham, first platoon leader; Burton Young, second pla toon leader; Ed Cruz, third platoon leader. Walter H. Parsons III, first sergeant; Edward J. Bunn supply sergeant; Don Emerson, public in formation sergeant; David Parnell, platoon sergeant of the first pla toon; John Sheffield, second pla toon sei’geant and Bob Fuller, pla toon sergeant of the third platoon. Board To Declare Union Fee Results The results of the union fee election which was held Wed nesday and Thursday in the Memorial Student Center will be canvassed and declared by the A&M System Board of Di rectors meeting here this week end. The Board will be feted with a dinner sponsored by the Bry an Chamber of Commerce at 7:30 tonight at The Oaks in Bryan. mosphere with French wait ers and a floor show at 10:30, followed by mid-night yell practice, will round out the night. Carolyn Thurman will be the vocalist for the floor show which features a bop band composed of Huber Cykukal, Richard Smith, Larry Johnson, Dick Newland and Darrell Williams. The dance starts at 8:30 p.m. and will last until 12 p.m. Admis sion is 75 cents per person. The big event of Saturday will be the A&M-University of Hous ton football game that night, with kickoff slated for 8. The Corps of Cadets will march into the game, falling out at 6:30 p.m. and moving onto the field at 6:55 p.m. Order of march for the game will be the band, Corps Staff, first regiment, second regiment, first wing and second wing. The newly formed “civilian unit” will m a r ch as the fourth company of the third battalion of the second regiment. Climax of the weekend will be Saturday night when the entire second floor of the Center will be devoted to dancing. Three bands will be featured, providing music for every taste. The Capers Combo will offer lat- in rhythm and the Prairie View Col legians will give out with the Dix ieland Jazz. The Aggieland Combo will furnish popular music and will have Sylvia Williams as vocalist. Theme for the Saturday night affair will be “Midnight in New Orleans.” The theme will be car ried throughout the second floor of the Union building. No definite time has been set for the closing of the dance, but it will start immediately after the football game ends. Admission is $1.25, couple or single. Ags i 1 1 ay Cougars Saturday Night By RONNIE GREATHOUSE Battalion Sports Editor After traveling over 3,000 miles to play its first two games, A&M stays home tomorrow night to host the vicious University of Houston Cougars at 8 p.m. As Shakespeare might have expressed it, the Cougars have a “lean and hungry look.” After devouring the ailing Montana Grizzlies in its opening game at Houston, 54-12, the Cougars are looking around for more victims. A crowd of 30,000 or better is expected to watch Coach Paul (Bear) Bryant’s superbly conditioned squad in its fam iliar Kyle Field surroundings for the first time this season. “We have more polish than last week, and we ran our plays better today,” said Bryant after yesterday’s workout, “but, we’ve still got to get News of the World By The ASSOCIATED PRESS DENVER—President Eisenhower’s recovery progressed to an extent where doctors decided to let him put his initials to a couple of government documents later in the week, pos sibly Saturday. It will be the first business transacted by the chief executive since he was stricken. At the same time, it was announced that Sherman Ad ams, Eisenhower’s top aide, will fly here from Washington tomorrow to take over direction of operations at the Denver White House. James C. Hagerty, White House press secretary, said in reply to questions that the two developments mean it is likely—barring complications in Eisenhower’s condition— that any need for possible delegation of presidential powers to other federal officials has about disappeared from the picture. Minor as the step is on the hazardous recovery road, it came considerably sooner than had been expected. Dr. Paul Dudley White of Boston, a leading heart specialist who examined Eisenhower Sunday and Monday, said afterward there would be a two-week period of absolute rest. ★ ★ ★ MEXICO CITY—Hurricane Janet, the season’s most vicious tropical storm, is breaking up in the Mexican mountains after faking a toll of 350 to 400 lives. There were reports of 150 found dead in the ruins of Chetumal, on the Yucatan peninsula. ★ ★ ★ HONOLULU—A reliable source said an American re leased Monday by the Chinese Reds suddenly refused to con tinue his trip home yesterday when his plane stopped at Wake Island. Meager information reaching Honolulu said Dilmus T. Kanady, a prisoner of the Reds for nearly five years, was traveling aboard a Pan American plane. When it was ready to leave, the source said, Kanady refused to go, claiming “diplomatic immunity.” ★ ★ ★ DALLAS—Adlai Stevenson said today “Texas would be better off today if the governor Allan/ Shivers had spent more time on veterans land and less on tidelands.” Annual Junior College Course Opens Monday Last Day To Drop Saturday is the last day for stu dents to drop courses without re ceiving an “F”, announced H. L. Heaton, registrar. Weather Today The twelfth annual Junior Col lege conference will be held in the Memorial Student Center Monday and Tuesday. Dr. W. W. Armistead, dean of the School of Veterinary Medicine, will deliver the opening address for the first session at 9 a.m. Monday. Robert B. Toulouse, dean of the Graduate School at North Texas State College, w r ill preside over the meeting, which will include a panel discussion on “How Cooperative Planning Gets Better Junior Col leges”, and Dr. John K. Folger’s address on “A Look at the Signif icance of Enrollment Increases in Texas.” C. C. Colvert, Texas University Junior College Education Consult ant, will preside over the second session at 7 p.m. Three panel dis cussions will be featured at this meeting. They include “Building and Plant Maintenance Programs”, “Optimum Utilitization of Teach ing Space and Equipment”, and “Financing the Building Program.” The third session at 7 p.m. Mon day, with C. H. Ransdell, acting dean of the Basic Division, pre siding, will feature an address by Dr. Clayton W. Williams, vice-pres ident for Academic Affairs at the University of Houston, on “Our Responsibility in Training for the Understanding of World Affairs”. PARTLY CLOUDY Temperature at 10:30 a.m. was 85 degrees. Yesterday’s high was 95 degrees with a low of 72 de grees. Forecast is partly cloudy. Aggieland Pictures To Start Monday Pictures for the ’56 Aggie land will be taken starting Monday with freshmen in field artillery, ordnance, air-aircraft artillery and signal corps un its on the schedule. Monday through Wednesday, Oct. 3, 4 and 5, the field ar tillery and ordnance pictures are scheduled; signal corps and AAA freshmen will have Frids taken Oct. 5 Thurs. and 6. id Film Society Has 1st Show Tonight The MSC Film Society will pre sent George (Foghorn) Winslow' in “Mj^ Pal Gus” at 7:30 in the ballroom. Other stars of the pic ture are Richard Widmark and Jo Ann Dru. The story depicts a boy’s evolu tion from an ill-tempered brat to a “pal,” upsetting a shakedown plot. Admission is by season ticket, I now on sale at the main desk of the Center, or by single ticket. Cost for students for a season tic ket is $1.25; for a non-student, [ $1.50. Single admission is 25 cents. Aggielands Here Oct. 6 Joe N. Gerber, dean of Stephen F. Austin State College, w r ill pre side over the final session at 9 a.m. Tuesday. Robei't B. Kamm, A&M dean of Student Personal Affairs, wdll speak on “Rehabili tation in Discipline,” followed by a panel discussion on this subject. Following a short recess, the Eval uation Committee will present an evaluation of the conference, and the Resolutions and Nominations Committee will present its report. Included in the displays for the conference will be an exhibit of school-plant models, draw-ings and pictures. The 1955 Aggieland will be here and ready for distribution Oct. 6, according to Kurt Nauck, editor. The annual, which consists of 512 pages, belongs to everyone who paid their student activities fee last year. They may be picked up on the first floor of Goodwin Hall. Each student should bring his iden tification card or his fee slip in case his name was left off of the roster. The 1956 Aggieland staff is now in the process of . organizing for the current year. This year’s class co-editors are Donald Burt and Bill Morton. Other members of the staff include Bill Meals, activ ities editor; Jim Bower, business manager; and Meade Bailey, civil ian editor. Photographers for the yearbook are Guy • Fernandez, James Schu bert and Mike King. in there and take charge Sat urday night to win.” KORA will broadcast the play-by-play beginning at 8 - p.m. The pre-game warm-up comes on the air at 7:50. The Aggie’s awesome display of power against LSU’s tough Tigers last Satui’day put several wrinkles in the youthful brow of Cougar Coach Bill Meek, in his first year at the 14,000 student University. “I wish I had stayed at home. After seeing that game I’ll be awake all week long worrying about how to stop those Aggies,” groaned Meek, after returning from Dallas last weekend. A&M spent Thursday’s practice session polishing its offense and setting-up defenses against Hous ton’s potent split-T attack. Coach Bryant plans to start the same eleven players that began the LSU fracas last week. Gene Stallings and Bobby Drake Keith will man the end positions, with Charles Krueger and Jack Powell at tackles* Jim Stanley and Dee Powell, guards, and Lloyd Hale, rounding out the forward wall, at center. Jimmy Wright, the sharp-shoot ing quarterback from Edinburg, directs the starting backfield. John Crow and Loyd Tayloi* hold down the halfback jobs/ and Jack Pardee throws 202-pounds at the Cougars from a fullback post. Donald Robbins, Bob Clendennen, Murry Trimble, Bobby Lockett, John Gilbert, Herb Wolf, Dennis Goerhing, George Johnson and Bobby Marks form the second team’s solid front line. Quarterback Donnie Grant teams with halfbacks Bill Dendy, Ed Dud ley, Gene Henderson, and fullbacks Kenneth Hall and George Gillar in the No. 2 backfield. Houston will be counting on its depth, and the experience of 22 returning lettermen to counteract the speed and agressiveness of the sophomore-loaded Aggies. Meek plans to stick with his unit substi tution system that pounded Mon tana into submission. The Cougars’ first quarter team is made up mostly of seniors, and is directed by Jimmy Dickey, a (See FOOTBALL, Page 3) Day Student Filing Closes Tomorrow Civilian day students desir ing to file for the Civilian Stu dent Council should file before noon tomorrow at 102 Good win, 105 Bizzell or 1 H Pur- year. Requirements for the post in clude a 1.0 grade point ratio, status of civilian student for at least one previous semester, and not on scholastic or dis ciplinary probation. The day student election will be held from 8 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wednes day. NOT DODGER FANS—These baseball fans perusing the fate of the Brooklyn Dodgers seem to be taking the telecast quite calmly; calmer, undoubtedly, than the Dodger front office is taking the outcome of the World Series so far. The MSC has its television sets tuned in to the game each day, so that anyone in the Center can yell with the Yankees and moan with the Bums.