THE iCTFALION Get Your Polio Shot Now! Number 228: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1957 Price Five Cents Students Turn Out in Record Number To Reject Compulsory Insurance Plan Kenneth Savage Elected Dorm 16 Civilian Senator Off the Cuff- What Goes! On Here Students, staff members and just about anybody else with a desire to «-> do some star-gazing should get in touch with somebody in Dr. Jack Kent’s Astronomy Club. They take special groups and really make the heavens put on a show, with the aid of telescopes and other appar atus in the physics department. Also each Thursday night they give lectures in room 320 of the Physics Building to budding as tronomers. Usually these sessions attract about 120-150 viewers per night. ★ ★ ★ Dr. J. S. Rogers, head of the Agronomy Department, returned t > today from Lubbock where he at tended a confei’ence on Agricultur al Chemicals. He was chairman of the coi'n and sorghum testing pro- H gram panel. ★ ★ ★ College Station will lose an old friend soon, when the ancient traf fic light at the North Gate goes down under the onslaught of pro- gress and a new, more efficient one replaces it. City Manager Ran Boswell has had the new one hanging in the city ■ shop for about three months, _ afraid to put it up until officials made sure it would be safe. Seems the old light is anchored to the building housing the A&M h Photo Shop, and many people were afraid that the additional weight ■* of the new light would pull the building down. The old one looks dangerous sometimes, if you have n’t noticed. But the new one weighs even less, and Boswell hopes to have it fn next week. ★ ★ ★ It’s pretty bad when a man’s trousers aren’t even safe, or at least Orin Helvey thinks so. Last week Helvey was out on the , intramural fields, playing football ♦ with some friends. He came to the field wearing P.E. shorts under his street clothes and left his billfold and keys in the pocket of his trous- ( ers, on the filed. After an afternoon of athletics, the weary Helvey returned to get his clothes and go home, but found them missing. After wandering around South College Station for some time, he knocked at the door of D. D. Bur- chard. Journalism Department head. Burchard’s son Don took I Helvey home. It’s not known who took Helvey’s trousers home. ?£,: Wi- w 1 - SBa~3MH MORE AGAINST THAN FOR—students turned out for yesterday’s election in record numbers as more ballots were cast than in many years. The total vote ran to 2,802. R.E. Services Open Monday Morning at II Classes will tuim out from 11 to 12 a.m. Monday for the first day of Religious Emphasis Week when President D. W. Williams will pre sent the 17 visiting religious lead ers in Guion Hall. Cadet Chaplain Jasper Lynn will open the program with the morn ing prayer and Don Royal will pre sent special music during the ser vices, Joe Blair, Chairman of In ter-faith Council will preside. Dr. Claude Broach, pastor of St. John’s Baptist Church, Charlotte, N. C., will make the morning ad dress. His subject will be “The Power the World Needs”. Organ music for the occasion will be provided by John O. Good and Cadet Chaplain Dwayne (Dub) Bailey will lead the singing. Dormitory Counselors will be available in their rooms from 4-6 p.m. each day for personal coun seling. At 7:15 Forums will be held in the dormitory by the coun selors. Dr. V. C. Arnspiger will conduct Forums for the married students each night in the South Solarium of the YMCA, at 7:15. Monday night’s topic is “The Basic Foun dation of the American Home.” A nursery will be available for children at the First Baptist Church at North Gate. A social hour will follow this and each succeeding meeting. Forums for faculty and staff members will be held Monday night in the second floor of the Fish Book Thief Out Indefinitely Indefinite suspension resulted last night following the hearing of the freshman book thief by Bennie A. Zinn, head of the Department of Student Affairs. After being caught taking an ED kit from the Memorial Stu dent Center, the freshman confess ed to several of the recent Center thefts. He admitted stealing a bi cycle earlier this year, but said after selling it he sent the money to the Campus Security Office. Wayne Stark, MSC director, said there have been no new develop ments in the crack-down on petty thievery. YMCA with Dr. William J. Kil gore leading- the discussion. His Monday night topic will be “A Ma ture Religion.” Staff and faculty members are invited to attend the social with married students after their meetings. Classes will be excused for each of the morning meetings in Guion Hall. The schedule is as follows: Monday—11;. Tuesday and Wed nesday—10; Thursday and Friday —9. John Beaty Named Cotton Ball King John Beaty has been named King Cotton for the annual Cotton Page ant and Ball set for April 12. Sponsored by the Agronomy So ciety, the Cotton Pageant and Ball will be presided over by King Beaty and a Cotton Queen to be chosen later. The Queen will be chosen fr-om four finalists in the sweetheart contest. Deadline for turning in pictures of the sweetheart candi dates is March 15. Portrait sizes requested are 3X5 or 5X8. Magazine Sales Pay For SDX Scholarships Members of the A&M chap ter of Sigma Delta Chi pro fessional journalistic frater nity, recently began a drive to raise funds for a scholar ship program to aid journalism students. Based on scholarship, need and professional aptitude, the awards will assist students in completing their college education. A faculty committee will select the winners based on nominations by the SDX chapter. Money for the scholarships is being raised by the chapter’s sale of the Time Magazine group of publications to faculty members. These include Time, Life, Fortune and Sports Illustrated at special reduced rates. Awarding of scholarships is planned to be made at an SDX ban quet in May. Included on the pro gram are awards to members of student publications for outstand ing work and Journalism Depart ment honors. Donald D. Burchard, ‘J’ depart ment head, has said that the pro gram is a “worthwhile project that would benefit many students” if faculty members respond to the drive. By LELAND BOYD Aggies rejected compulsory insurance. Official Election Commission returns show: For 1,130 Against - 1,640 Ballots rejected 32 Clark New Prexy Of Civilian Group Bill Clark of Leggett Hall re placed James Carnes as president of the Civilian Student Council last night in the Council’s regu lar meeting in the Senate Cham ber of the Memorial Student Cen ter. Clark was elected by the Coun cil since Carnes can not hold the office due to scholastic difficulty, a Council member said. Carnes took office in January replacing Sam Zuckero who grad uated at the end of the fall semes ter. On leaving the president’s chair Carnes urjfed councilmen to empha size to their dormitories need for getting polio shots. Roy Andrews of Law Hall was Total 2,802 In the largest turn-out in recent student election history at A&M, 510 more students voted against compulsory insur ance than voted to accept the compulsory plan. Unconfirmed reports last night said the 2,802 total vote is a record for recent elections and referendums. The Election Commission headed by Don Weber, finish ed the count after several hours of checking and tabula ting. Largest known vote besides yes terday’s was in September, 1955 over the MSC Union Fee in which 1,751 votes were registered. A breakdown of the four voting boxes showed relatively close votes for each of the sections of the campus except College View. In a light vote, College View voters cast 60 “against” and 9 “for”. Four hundred and fifty students live in this area. Memorial Student Center booth registered 701 “against” with 460 “for’s”. Students living in Hart and Bizzell Halls along with part of the day students were generally expected to vote in the MSC. An even 600 ballots were cast “against” the issue at the Sbisa Mess Hall box, gaining a consid erable lead over the 455 cast “for.” Dorms 14, 15, 16, 17 and Walton is the area covered by this box. As for the Duncan Mess Hall voting, a comparatively light vote was tabulated for the area, com posed of Corps dorms, 1 through 12. Voting there was 279 against, 206 for. All boxes registered a victory for the “against” votes. Thirty-two ballots were rejected for failing to meet referendum spe cifications. Percentage-wise, about 58.5 per cent were against, 40.3 were for and 1.2 per cent were rejected. In Dorm 16 senator election, Kenneth C. Savage of Columbus, Nebraska was un-opposed. The election commission reported five votes cast—with all for. Savage is a senior petroleum- geology major. CHS Schedules Dance, Banquet A&M Consolidated High School students will hold two of the big dances of the year this weekend, according to Roseanne Phillips, student council publicity chairman. The first will be held at 8 to night in the activity room of the school, when the annual Valentine Dance, sponsored by the junior class, unfolds. The Valentine Dance will be semi-formal, cost 50 cents with or without date and will have re freshments. Decorations will be on the traditional Valentine theme. Tomorrow at 6:30 p. m., the an nual Future Homemakers of America banquet - dance will be held in the Memorial Student Cen ter. elected parliamentarian to replace Clark. John La Croix of Milner Hall, chairman of the New Student Week Committee, reported his committee has given some thought to finding ways to handle civilian freshmen. He said his committee advocated finding a better way to teach them Aggie traditions. “Maybe a plan could be made which would include some require ments to be placed on freshmen,” La Croix said. “Maybe they could be marked in some way also.” Civilian Chaplain, Bob Bacher, asked councilmen to check where visiting ministers will stay and see that they are made to feel at home during their stay here. Aggie Band Sweetheart Finalists m Martha Berry Ed Thorpe, escort Jimmy Elizabeth Nacol James E. Fallin, escort Shirley Cannon Cyrus Helmer Holley Jr., escort Becky Scarborough Jim Morris, escort Caroline Moore Dave McLain, escort Band Dance Slated For Next Week Texas Aggie Band members will see one of five finalists chosen Band Sweetheart of 1957 at their annual dance to be held Saturday, Feb. 23 in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. From 9 to 12 p.m., band mem bers and their dates will be danc ing to the music of Bill Turner’s Aggie Combo. During the dance, at some time, judges chosen from the faculty will look over the fin alists and decide who will be this year’s sweetheart. Sweetheart finalists are Jimmy Elizabeth Nacol of Port Arthur, entered by James Fallin; Martha Berry of Gladewater, entered by Eddie Thorpe; Shirley Cannon of College Station, entered by Cyrus H. Holley Jr.; Caroline Moore of Kilgore, entered by David McLain and Becky Scarborough of Hous ton, entered by Jim Morris. Weather Today Forecast calls for continued cloudiness, with no important change in temperature. The tem perature at 10:30 this morning was 77 degrees. Yesterday’s high reading was 73 degrees, and this morning’s low, 64.