The Battalion Number 84:Volume 53 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1056 Price 5 Cents NEW OFFICES—A&M’s dean of Student Personnel Services, Dr. Robert M. Kamrn, has relocated in his new office on the second floor of the YMCA Building. Several other departments, including Student Publications, Student Affairs, Student Activities, and more, are awaiting completion of the basement of the building, where more offices will be located. The completion and moving will be finished, at the latest estimate, about the middle of next month. Houstonians To Play Band Dance Tomorrow TCFR Group Op ens Meeting I lere Sunday The Texas Council of Fam ily Relations will hold its tenth annual conference in the assembly room of the Memor ial Student Center Sunday and Monday. T h e m o of the session is “Strengths fior Effective Family Living.” Mrs. Eloise T. Johnson, presi dent, Texas Council on Family Re lations, will preside over the ses sion to he held Sunday evening at 7:30. Rev. Douglas R. MaeLaury of the University of Houston will give the address: “Spiritual Strengths for Family laving.” Registration will start at 8 a.m. Monday. At 9 the general session will be held in the social room of the MSC. Keynote address of the general 1 session, “Sources of Strength for Effective Family Living,” will he given by Dr. Bernice M. Moore, consultant, Texas Education Agen cy, Hogg Foundation for Mental Hygione, and Dr. Harry T. Moore, Sociology Department, University of Texas. A luncheon will be held at 12:20 in the. ballroom of the Student Court Action Asked In Alabama "Troubles The annual Consolidated Band Dance will be held tomorrow night from 8 to 11. The Houstonians, a 14-piece or- chesti’a from Sam Houston State College, will provide music for the iance. Highlight of the evening Fill be presentation of the Band 5weetheart. In addition to the presentation of the Sweetheart, entertainment Will be provided by the “High Five,” a combo made up of five band members. They are Tommy Short, Morris Partain, Dwight Al len, Charles Welter and Tommy Adams. The “High Five” recently won a talent audition held here for the Baylor Talent Show scheduled latei in the semester. Instrumentation of the combo includes three gui tars, a bass fiddle and drums. The combo won the talent audition play ing such numbers as “Lovei%” “Ma- iguena” and “September Song.” Five finalists have been chosen to compete for the honor of Band Sweetheart. The Sweetheart will be chosen at the dance. The final ists are Mildred Taylor of Dallas, sponsored by Clint White; Cynthia Plakard of San Antonio, sponsored by Gary December; Madeline Lee of Victoria, sponsored by Tommy Short; Janice Graves of Marshall, sponsored by Kenneth George and Lita St. Clair of Hochheim, spon- sored by Firmin Le Pori. Decoi'ations for the dance include Qualification Tests To Be Applied For Applications for the April 19 Selective Service College Qualifi cation Test may be picked up now at the Housing Office in Goodwin Hall. They must be postmarked no later than March 5, 1956. Anyone who is now a registrant and intends to request occupation al deferment as a student, is sat isfactofily pursuing a full-time college'course as undergraduate or graduate, and has not previously taken the test is qualified. a false ceiling made of crepe paper streamers with streamers hanging down to the floor to separate the tables. At one end of the dance floor, there will be a life-size rep lica of a fat bass horn player play ing his horn with hearts coming out instead of notes. The committee for the dance is composed of Tommy Short, co-or dinator; Dwight Brown, finance; Bill Swann, Sweetheart Selection; Wendell M ounce. Orchestra and Decorations; Cecil Steward, Guests and Programs and Roger Alexan der, Intermission Entertainment. Job Interviews Center. Evaluation of the confer ence will be given by Mrs. Louella Rote, supervision of policewomen, Houston Police Department. After a business meeting the conference will adjourn. Visitors are welcome to any of the program sessions. Soviet Union To Be Topic For Lecture Dr. Albert C. Hall, general man ager of the research laboratories division, Bendix Aviation Corpor ation, Detroit, Mich., will present a graduate lecture on “Progress of Automation in the Soviet Un ion” at 8 p.m. Tuesday night in the lecture room of the Biological Sciences Building, Dr. Ide P. Trot ter, dean of the Graduate School, has announced. One of three American engineers who visited Russia last summer, Dr. Hall, a native Texan who re ceived his B.S. at A&M in 1936 with an Electrical Engineering major, was one of the first Amer ican engineers to see Soviet plants and laboratories since the end of World War II. The public is invited to attend the lecture, Dr. Trotter said. Ousted Negro Coed Files To Re-Enter University BIRMINGHAM—UP) — The University of Alabama's first Negro student, Aiftherine Lucy of Birmingham, yester day asked a federal judge to compel school authorities'to al low her to resume her studies there which ended in rioting on the campus earlier this week. U. S. I list. Judge Hubert Grooms set the new case for hearing here Feb. 29. Miss Lucy, 26-year-old secretary, was excluded from classes by the university’s board of trustees after rioting crowds had rocked and egged school officials and the Negro student Monday. The school contends the board action was a safety measure. In a companion petition, she - * The following inteiwiews will be held next week in the Place ment Office: Monday KOPPERS COMPANY, INC. of Port Arthur will interview majors in chemistry and ChE. The TEXAS COMPANY will in terview geology, geol. eng., and EE majors for openings in geo physical exploration. TEXAS-U.S. CHEMICAL COM PANY of Port Neches desire to talk to men interested in locating in the Beaumont-Port Arthur area, chemical engineering majors. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES—Applied Science Di vision will interview chemistry and EE majors for work with custom ers and prospects in .electronic computing. r Monday and Tuesday SHELL OIL COMPANY will in terview for Shell Oil, Shell Chem ical, Shell Development and Shell Pipe Line Corp. Majors ift chem istry, ChE, CE, EE, M-E and Eng. Physics. Also accounting, BA arid IE majors for personnel woidc. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA — all levels in ChE, BS and MS in EE and ME, also MS and PhD in mathematics. Openings in Research, Develop ment, Technical Service, Opera tions, Design, Maintenance, Con structions. Tuesday UNITED STATES GYPSUM COMPANY of Sweetwater, Te-xas, will interview ME, ChE, IE, chem- stry and IT majors fon- employ ment opportunities in production management, supervision and e*i- gineering. Wilkins Reported To Be Recovering Bobby Wilkins, freshman in D Infantry, is reported to be rapidly recovering from an attack of spinal meningitis earlier last week. Lt. Col. Tayloi’ Wilkins, assist ant commandant and father of the boy, said yesterday doctors have said if his improvement continues, he can go home in a few days. Wilkins was in a coma from 2 p. m. Friday until early Monday morning. MSS III Asks For Manuscripts MSS III, the A&M anthology of student writings, is still accepting manuscripts. All students interested in seeing their work in print are urged to submit their creative writing to R. W. Feragen in the English De partment or get in touch with John Kirkpatrick, editor of this year’s book. The book will be made up of sec tions of poetry, fiction and exposi tory writing. A $5 prize is offered for the best poem and the best short story. Judging Team Wins Honors In Contest The A&M Junior Livestock Judging Team, coached by J. W. Gossett, copped fourth place in a recent contest held in conjunction with the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show in Fort Worth. There wei'e 15 teams entered in the contest. The team placed second in sheep and fifth in beef cattle judging. Bud Fichte was high individual in the quarter horse contest while Bobby Wakefield took fifth high in sheep judging. Joe Ross was ninth high indiv idual in the over-all contest and placed fourth in sheep judging. Gossett also judged and helped to conduct the Junior College Live stock Judging Contest while at the show. The State, State, Texas first six teams were Iowa Oklahoma A & M, Kansas Texas A&M, Arizona and Tech. Military Ball Teddy Phillips and Monica Lew is wil Ibe featured at the annual Military Ball to be held in Sbisa Hall March 17. Committees have been appointed and are now work ing out plans for the dance. Chair men of the committees are Dance Committee, Glen Rice; Decora tions Committee, Don Burton; and Program Committee, Ralph Cole. Meetings and Forums asked the court to order Dean of Women Sarah Healy to as sign her to a dormitory room and to allow her to eat in uni versity dining halls. She was not given dormitory space when she was admitted Feb. 1. Hearing on the dormitory and dining hall petition, which asks $1,000 damages, was set for Feb. 29 also. In yesterday’s petition Miss Lucy charged that she was ex cluded solely because of her race or color, in defiance of an order from Judge Grooms last July, un der which the student was admit ted to the university last week. She termed her suspension from classes “a cunning strategem” to deny her the right to attend her I state university. She asked $2,000 damages, and that Dr. O. C. Carmichael, univer sity president; William F. Adams, dean of admissions, and the 10 trustees to be held in contempt and remain “in prison for a pei iod to be determined by this court, or by permitting” her to resume classes. Filed by Arthur D. Shores, at torney for Miss Lucy, the petition also asserted her suspension was not necessary for her safety or the safety of others. It added that no one was injured during the. mass demonstrations at the school, and that police protec tion “is available and adequate:” The Birmingham secretary charged further that her suspen sion was “to appease persons hav ing no connection with the Uni versity of Alabama, who wish to defy and prevent the enforcement of the order of this court.” SJm also charged the school of ficials and trustees “failed and re fused to take action within their power to prevent persons having no connection” with the school from interfering. In a press conference after the petitions were filed, Shores said Miss Lucy would not return to the university until after the Feb. 29 hearing here “unless the trustees rescind their suspension before that date.” “And if she goes back,” he added, she will not attempt to eat or sleep there until the case involving dormitory and dining hall privi leges is settled.” Smith To Play For Junior Ball Here Feb. 25 Bob Smith and his Orches tra will be featured at the annual Junior Class Banquet and Ball to be held Feb. 25. The banquet will be held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Chester Lauck, Continental Oil Corp. pub ic relations representative, will be guest speaker. Tickets will remain on sale until Feb. 16, and can be obtained from battalion sergeant-majors or dorm itory representatives. Admission will be $2 for the dance, if class dues have been paid and $8 if not. The banquet will be $1.50 per plate. All juniors should turn in pic tures of girls for Junior Sweet heart candidates before 5 p.m. Feb. 20 at Student Activities Office in Goodwin Hall. Cellist, Pianist To Give Recital The MSC Recital Series will pre sent a cellist and a pianist at 2 Sunday afternoon in the assembly room of the Memoi'ial Student Center. Miss Mary Spaulding Will be at the piano and Mrs. Phyllis Young is the cellist. Miss Spaulding is an instructor of piano at the Uni versity of Texas and Mrs. Young is guest lectm-er of music at the University. Both Miss Spaulding and Mrs. Young are members of the Pi Kap pa Lambda and Sigma Alpha Iota h o n o r ary musical fratemities. These two young artists have made many solo and chamber music ap pearances. This season their tour will include San Antonio, Houston, Austin and Corpus Christi. Recital Series season tickets wall be accepted for the performance. Regular admission tickets are 75 cents and may be purchased at the door. RE Leaders Arrive Soon NO MISTAKE—There will be no mistake as to where the third group lives after this sign is erected on the dormitory walls. Several other signs on dormitories throughout both Corps areas designate battalions, groups or regiments. Pictured left to right are Dennis Heitkamp, Robert Barlow, John Sandhop, Jack Cook, Tom Connor, Frank Waddell and Wayne Young. By JIM NEIGHBORS Battalion Staff Writer Religious Emphasis Week lead ers will begin arriving on the cam pus Feb. 18 in preparation for dis cussion meetings and forums be- 1 * ginning the following day. Dr. Morris Wee, pastor of the Bethel Lutheran Church, Univer sity of Wisconsin, will be the main convocation speaker for the morn ing services in Guion Hall. Rev. John Paul Carter, of the Canterbury Association, Austin, will take charge of discussion and forum groups in Walton Hall. He will be available for conferences during the week and will live in Walton. Carter, a native of Clarksburg, W. Va., received his B.A. degree in philosophy from William and Mary. He received his B.D. de gree from Virginia Theological Seminary and was granted his Masters from the University of the South. While in colleg’e, Carter was se lected to Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities, and was president of the Canterbury Association. He was also a mem ber of Eta Sigma Phi, Clayton Grimes Biological Society and Stu dent Religious Union. He came to Texas in 1952 as Episcopal Chaplain to students at the University of Texas. He has taught two courses as Canterbui'y Bible Professor and now serves pn the Board of Trustees for Grace Hall. Rev. Luke Bolin, associate min ister of the East Dallas Christian Church, Dallas, will live in Leggett Hall and lead forums and discus sion groups for Milner and Leg gett Halls and be available for con ferences during the week. These meetings will be held in the Leg gett Hall lounge. Bolin received his B.D. degree from Butler University, Indianap olis, Ind., and served as an Army Chaplain for four years during World War II. He became pastor of the First Christian Church, Bay City, Tex., and later went to the East Dallas church. He is a thirty-second degree ma son, a member of the Dallas Hear- (See RELIGIOUS, Page 2) Faculty Meeting The regular A&M spring faculty meeting will be held in Guion Hall, Tuesday, Feb. 14 at 4 p.m. accord ing to David H. Morgan, president. Weather Today CLEAR Clear cool weather is forecasted for College Station today. No cold fxonts predicted but the clear skies will lower the temperature. Yes terday high of 48 degrees dropped to a low of 41 degrees. Temper- ature at 10:30 this morning was 45 degjjpes. Deadline Saturday Saturday will be the last day for students to enroll for the spring semester. Students who^-are planning to add cour ses are also reminded to take care of this before Saturday. No new courses may be added after that time. Courses may be dropped with no grade un til Saturday week. PROSPECTOR?—Mike Keen. Battalion photographer,.' es in his prospecting disguise, really his beard for Civilian Day program, before he shaved it off. Many er beards are being sported around the campus as cr students prepare for the big day, March 10. __ l n Ji