Number 108: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1956 Price 5 Cents Aunt Jemima Set For Pancake Fry AGGIE PLAYERS—Shown above are Chris Pavelka and Allen Coulter, stars in the Aggie Players’ production of “Family Portrait”. Appearances begin tonight at 8 in the Center Ballroom and continue nightly through Tuesday. Ticket prices are 50 and 75 cents. Aunt Jemima-, guest chef for the annual College" Station-Bryan Ki- wanis Club Pancake Festival ar rived yesterday and immediately began a rigorous schedule of pub lic school appearances in prepara tion for the Pancake Festival which is to be held Saturday at the Bryan Country Club. Serving as head chef of the an nual festival, Aunt Jemima said she was more than pleased to “cook for the benefit of under privileged children in College Sta- ! tion and Bryan”, in whose behalf the Festival is held. Aunt Jemima, also commonly known as “Mammy” is a trade mark for the Quaker Oats Com pany. The festival will be held from noon until 2 p.m., and again from 4 p. m. to 9 p. m. at the Bryan Country Club on College Avenue between Bryan and College Sta tion. Tickets are 75 cents for everyone but pi’e-school children. “Anyone who cannot attend the festival, but would like to con tribute to our under-privileged children fund should buy the tic kets anyway,” said W. E. .“Woody” Briles, general chairman. “All tickets not used will be turned over to the U.S.O. in Bryan, in or- Fiftietli Anniversary Architects Will Have Ball The Architectural Society Annual Beaux-Arts Ball will be the fii'st attraction in the fiftieth anniver sary celebration of the Division of Architecture. Dancing will begin at 9 p.m. in the Maggie Parker Dining Hall in Bryan tomorrow night and will continue until everyone has left. The Sonny Mai'x Trio from Hous ton will provide the music and floor show for the Ball. Theme for this year’s Ball is “Nightmares.” Those attending will wear costumes having some ClassOfficerFiling Closes On Tuesday Filings for class offices for the 1956-57 school term will close Tuesday at 5 p.m., according to W. D. (Pete) Hardesty, organization advisor of the Department of Stu dent Activities. The election will be held April 11. . Members of the classes of ’57, ’58 and ’59 may file for positions as president, vice-president, secretary, social secretary, treasurer, parlia mentarian and sergeant-at-arms. The class of ’57 will elect two yell leaders and a student enter tainment manager. The class of ’58 will,elect two yell leaders. The Election Commission states that primaries of any form, with out the consent of the commission, ai’e illegal. connection with the theme. All decorations will be planned with the theme in mind. Highlighting the Ball will be the Grand March. Each person attend ing will pai'ade befoi-e judges, and the best costume of the night will be chosen. Winner will receive a cash award. The Ball is an annual event which has been held for almost as many years as the Architecture Division has been here, according to Key Colb, president of the stu dent chapter of the American In stitute of Architects. It is spon sored each year by the AIA. Other officers of the AIA are Norman Ufer, vice-president; and Jack Yardley, secretary-treasurer. Fiftieth anniversary observance of the founding of the Ai'chitecture Division will begin Sunday and last through Tuesday. “Survival Through Architecture” will be the theme of the conference. Fifty years ago, the Division of Architecture was founded here. A&M was the first school in Texas to establish such a division. Since then, the Division of Architecture has come to be one of the best in the nation, and the special observ ance will find graduates and former staff members returning to the campus for the occasion. Throughout the conference, there will be an exhibit in the .Division of Architecture of work old and new, both professional and student. Publications Offices To Move Next Week Class of 1921 Holds Reunion The members of the class of ’21 will observe their 35th anniversary at a class reunion in the MSC to r morrow and Sunday. Members of the class are sche duled to ai-rive during the day Sat urday and the first official func tion of the reunion will be a din ner at 8 p.m. in the Assembly room of the MSC. Special guests of the class will be Dean Emeritus E. J. Kyle, in whose honor Kyle Field is named, and President Emeritus F. C. Bos ton. Other activities of the reunion will include a breakfast in the As sembly Room at 8 a.m. A small group of members of the class of ’08 will gather on the cam pus Sunday for an informal get- together to plan the groups’ Gol den Anniversary to be observed in 1958. These former students will meet informally with professors and faculty members who were at A&M when the class was here and will have a dinner in the Assembly Room Sunday night at 7 p.m. and a breakfast Monday morning at 8 a.m. By Wednesday of next week, all student publications offices will be housed in their new quarters in the basement of the YMCA. The basement has been under extensive remodeling constniction in preparation for the office facili ties which also are to include the office of Student Affairs. A t present, however, only the publica tions offices are ready for occu pancy. Offices in the move are tlie Com mentator’, The Battalion, Aggie- land, Southwestern Veterinarian, Engineer, Agriculturist and Office of Student publications. The four magazines and the Ag- gieland will have their offices in the east wing of the basement. Also in the east wing are a libra ry, conference room and darkroorq* The Battalion and Student Publi cations offices are located in the north wing. These offices and the darkroom will be air conditioned. The Aggieland and magazine of fices will not. New desks, filing cabinets and 29 secretarial-type chairs will be used in the offices. Very little old furniture will be moved from Good win Hall since most of the offices are equipped with completely new facilities. As soon as all of the offices now occupying Goodwin Hall are moved to the YMCA, the Department of Oceanography will expand its of fices to the second floor of Good win. der that they can pass them out to personnel at B.A.F.B.” Included on the menu besides the featured pancakes wil be bacon, eggs, sausage, maple syrup, milk, coffee and many other items. Sec onds will be served on everything but milk. “With increased grill space avail able this year, no one should have to wait moi'e than 10 minutes to be served,” Briles said. “Last year, in spite of the over-worked cooks, we made over $800.” Aunt Jemima was occupied toj day with a rapid round of public appearances. Last night she ap peared on radio station KORA, and today she has appeared at Crock ett, Travis, and A&M Consolidated elementary schools, Lamar Junior High in Bryan, and a joint meeting of College Station and Bryan Ki- wanis Clubs at noon. At 5:30 p.m. today, she will be heard again over KORA, from Orr’s Super Market. Tickets can be bought at Sol Klien’s, W.S.D. Clothiers, and Wick Massey Motors in Bryan, McCar ty’s Jewelers in College Station, or from any Kiwanian in either city. Men with sandwich boards adver tising the festival Will be on the streets of both cities tomorrow, and tickets may be bought from them. City Election Will Be Held Here April 3 April 3 has been set as the date for the city elections, ac cording" to Ran Boswell, Col lege Station city manager. A mayor and three councilmen will be elected. Only candidate for the mayor’s post is Ernest Langford, head of the Architect Department. D r. Langford is mayor at present. Candidate for counsilman, first ward, is Marion Pugh; second ward, Joe Sorrels; and third ward, A. P. Boyett. Pugh, Sorrels, and Boyett also are incumbents. Two councilmen are elected from each ward, one each year, to serve two-year terms. The mayor, elect ed at large evei’y year, makes the seventh member of the council. Councilmen completing the ifirst year of a two-year term include Ernest Seeger, ward thi’ee; J. A. Orr, ward one; and G. W. Black, ward two. Ward one includes all of south College Station, ward two is the east part of the city and College Hills, while the thii’d ward con tains the North Gate area. Rodeo Arena Work Rodeo Club members ai’e con structing new walkways around the stands of the A&M Rodeo Arena. At the same time, rotten and broken benches are being replaced and pens and chutes are being painted with preservation paint. Mom ~s Fund Has $750 In Donations More than $750 has been collected in the Ross Volun teers money drive for Mrs. Irene (Mom) Claghorn, as sistant hospital superinten dent injured in a recent auto mobile accident near Dallas. Wednesday night, $410 was collected from dormitories over the campus. Tubs in the Memorial Student Center have attracted $20 and former stu dents and friends have sent $220 through the mail. “Mom is progressing nicely and will be strong enough for an operation on her leg Sat urday morning,” said Dr. J. E. Marsh, head of the College Hospital. She is in Baylor Hospital in Dallas, room 611. Collections from students will continue through Tuesday but will last about a month longer for former students. The committee in charge of raising funds, has asked The Battalion to extend their “thanks” to those who have contributed to the Mom Clag horn fund. Those wanting to contribute may send their money to the Mom Claghorn Fund, Box 4538, College Station. Miss Jeaneane Dowis Monday Night’s Recital Series Attraction Jeaneane Dowis Recital Series Has Pianist The Memorial Student Center Recital Series will present Miss Jeaneane Dowis, described as a “remarkable young artist”, Mon day night at 8 in the Memorial Student Center. Miss Dowis, who played her first recital at the age of five, entered high school at 10 and graduated Education Analysis To Be Given on TV A 90 minute analysis of the de velopment of education in the Uni ted States on the college and uni versity level will be presented on the TV program “Omnibus” Sun day afternoon. In order to concentrate the an alysis in one place, the program will originate from Harvard Uni versity, the oldest college in this country and the direct link with European Universities. The traditions, methods, prob lems and accomplishments of the past 320 years of education in America will be presented. Also, examples of extra-curric ular activities and their place in [education will be shown. Senior Classers May Submit Girl’s Picture Any member of the Class of ’56 is eligible to submit a candidate for Vanity Fair, ac cording to Kurt Nauck, editor of the ’56 Aggieland. This may be done by submitting one full length and one bust shot, either 5x7 or 8x10, to the Office of Student Publications by May 1. Any senior may enter his favor ite girl, wife or mother in the Senior Favorite section of the Ag gieland. This may be done by submitting a 3x4 or 3x5 glossy pi’int bust shot to the Office of Student Publications by April 15. There is a two dollar charge for these pictures. Sophomores are reminded that they must have their picture for the class section of the ’56 Aggie land made by Easter. There may be no time left for make-ups. All club pictures must be re served in the Club Section before Easter. This may be done at the Office of Student Publications. at 13 aftei'which she attended the North Texas State College in Den ton. She had already won such con tests as the Piano Teachers Guild, Mu Phi Epsilon, played recitals at several universities and toured with the North Texas State Col lege Orchestra throughout Texas and Oklahoma. She studied with Adele Marcus and more recently with Rosina Lhevinne at the Juilliard School of Music. Upon receiving her degree from Juilliard, she was presented the Carl Roeder Award granted “to the pianist most outstanding in talent and achievement.” She had previously received both the Josef Lhevinne Memorial Scholar ship and a grant from the Olga Samaroff Foundation. Other honors for Miss Dowis in the past few years include the Cho pin Awai’d of the Kosciuszko Foundation with its $1,000 prize, twice winning a recording award of the National Piano Teachers Guild, playing with the Juilliard Orchestra under Jean Morel after winning the Juilliard Concerto Competition and performance as soloist with the Far Rockaway Symphony and the Little Orches tra Society. Tickets are $1.50 except for Stu dent Activities Card holders who are admitted free. Aggie Players Give Easter PI ay To night The Aggie Players will present the first performance of “The Family Poi’trait” tonight at 8 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. Prices for tickets are 50 and 75 cents. They may be bought from any member of the Council of Church Women or at the door. Other performances' of the play will be held each night through Tuesday. “The Family Portrait” is a re ^ ligious drama depicting the family of Jesus. Under the direction of C. K. Esten, the play will be pre sented in the round. Tickets On, Sale For Annual Rodeo Tickets for the seventh annual Intercollegiate Rodeo, April 19-21, are now on sale and may be pur chased from any member of the Rodeo Club. Ticket holders are eligible to win a Shetland pony, to be given away at the Saturday night per formance and do not have to be present to win. HEAVE HO—Workmen are shown above unloading one of the new desks that will be used in the new student publications offices in the basement of the YMCA. All offices are expected to be moved into their new quarters by Wednesday. Horticulture Class Visits San Antonio Seven horticulture students will i leave April 8 to visit the San | Antonio Produce Terminal Market, Lthe Van Dewalle Farms, and sev- ! eral average sized vegetable farms. The annual field trip to the San Antonio area is taken by students | enrolled in vegetable crops man agement. It is designed to supple ment the theory given here on the campus. Contestants from 15 colleges an( j universities will participate i a rodeo—each school sending a rodeo team consisting of eight members Added attractions will be a VO p ing contest between Tommy Holli day and Brazos Varisco of Bryan and a Champion Cutting Horse Contest. Other events are bare- back bronc riding, saddle brone riding, steer wrestling, calf r 0 pi n g bull riding, girls barrel race anq girls goat-tie. Prizes donated by local mer- ! chants from surrounding areas win be given to the winners of eac b event. The all-around cowboy will ; receive a trophy saddle and the winner of each event will receive a trophy buckle. Admission is $1 for adults and 60 cents for students and men ip uniform. Advance student tickets j sell for 50 cents. Melloh Resigns After 9 Years Here At A&M Dr. A. W. Melloh, vice dir ector of the Texas Engineer ing Experiment Station since 1947, has resigned, effective April 30, it was announced here today. Fred J. Benson, direct or of the A&M System’s Transpor tation Institute will serve as act ing vice-director of the expex’iment station, upon Dr. Melloh’s resigna tion. A native of Wrenshall, Minneso ta, and graduate of the University of Minnesota, from which he holds M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in electri cal engineering, Dr. Melloh came to Texas from Rochester, New York, where he had been serving as Sen ior Engineer for Stromberg Carl son Company. He joined the A&M System as vice-director of the En gineering Experiment Station, dir ecting statewide research on en gineering and industrial problems. In the nine years Dr. Melloh has headed its work, the Engineering Experiment Station has shown steady growth. It had a staff of 18 people working on some 15 re search projects in 1947, with an an nual budget of approximately $100,000. The station now has an average staff of 100 people, work ing on 60 projects with an annual budget of some $600,000. Outstanding contributions of the station during Dr. Melloh’s admin istration have been in the fields of architectural research, industrial economics and the expansion of fan-testing and other service lab oratories. Weather Today CLOUDY Partly cloudy with possible thunder showers tonight is fore casted for the College Station area. Yesterday’s high of 56 degrees dropped to 49 degrees last night. Temperature at 10:30 this morn ing was 61 degrees.