\ Maggie Fountain Judy Maywald Miss Milner Hall Miss Bizzell Hall By JOE BUSER Bad weather won’t hamper the Civilian Playboys this weekend— they’re going to have a Ball. It’s Civilian Ball time and they have received permission from "Playboy” magazine to use their famous bunny for , advertising and decorations. In return, the maga zine has asked for some pictures of the Playboy festivities, possibly for a future issue. Playboy activities will begin Saturday with an all-star softball game between the Civilian dorms and College View, beginning at 2 p. m. Anyone interested in play ing on one of the- teams should contact either Bill Perry, Leggett, 93, who is managing the dorm team or Tom Reyman, D-6-D, manager for the College View group. Other before-barbeque games scheduled are potato sack races and some volleyball games. A pound of beef from Martin’s heads the mepu for the barbeque to be held at 5 p. m. in The Grove if the weather is fair, and under the west stands of Kyle Field if it’s foul. Also included in the fare will be baked beans, potato salad, iced tea, pickles and onions. Topping off the activities Satur day will be the annual Civilian Ball, which will be held in Sbisa hall at 9 p. m. Decorations will follow the Playboy theme with rabbits at the door, on the tables and hang ing from the ceiling. Price for tickets is $2, stag or drag. The Civilian sweetheart will be chosen from 12 finalists from all over the state during an intermis sion. The finalists and their es corts are Mrs. Sunny Sue Carpen ter, Day Student entry, escorted by Jerry Carpenter; Miss Bettie Beasley, Mitchell Hall entry, es corted by Jim Smith; Miss Rita Francis Reid, Puryear Hall entry, escorted by Leon Betale and Miss Ethel Ann de Cordova, Walton Hall entry, escorted by Walker Porter. Mrs. Benita Williams, College View entry, escorted by John D. Williams; Mrs. Lynn A. Farmer, College View entry, escorted by James R. Farmer; Mrs. Jeanene Stein, College View entry, escorted by S. J. Stein; Miss Judy Maywald, Bizzell Hall entry, escorted by Nor man Guilloud and Mrs. Wanda Westermap, College View entry, escorted by Richard C. Westerman. Miss Shirley Stewart, Law Hall entry, escorted by Roy Andrews; M iss Maggie Fountain, Milner Hall entry, escorted by George F. Luguette and Miss Joan Quasso, Legett hall entry, escorted by Champ Grona. The Aggieland Orchestra will make the sounds for the Playboys and their dates to dance by. A baby sitting service for stu dents with children will be provid ed by the A&M Presbyterian Church. Charge for the service is 25 cents and bedding should be brought for the children. 18,440 READERS « BATTALION Student Senate Meets Tonight Number 269: Volume 55 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1957 Price Five Cents Frosh Honor Fraternity Has Banquet Tonite Phi Eta Sigma’s annual banquet, honoring 91 freshmen who have posted a 2.5 or higher grade point ratio, will be held tonight at the Memorial Student Center Ballroom at 7 p.m. Kicking off the program will be an initiation ceremony in the MSC’s Birch Room, at 6:30. All eligible men who were not initia ted last March will be initiated. Dr. Ralph Steen, head of the History Department, will be chief speaker at the banquet, which in cludes presentation of new officers for the coming year. Senate Agenda Selection of a student insurance policy and the company will be discussed at the Student Senate meeting tonight. The report will be made to the Senate by John Webb, according to Larry Piper, senate president. Plans for the reserve seat elec tion will be discussed tonight fol lowed by a debate, he said. KTBX-TV Op ens Here Next Week Snow-blinded television viewers will get a “brighter outlook” in the College Station- Bryan area next week when Bryan’s first TV station starts telecasting over KTBX, Channel 3. Opening of the new station, originally scheduled for yesterday, had to be delayed because violent weather hampered the erection of the tower. Harry Gilliam, manager of the station, announced that the rig should arrive from New Mexico this weekend, and five days would be required to set up the tower. The formal opening has been re scheduled for no later than next Friday, Saturday or Sunday, said Gilliam. At present, the nearest stations to this region, reported Gilliam, are Waco (Channel 10), 89 miles away; Houston (Channel 2), 97 miles distant and Austin (Channel 7), 106 miles off. Reception has been somewhat hazy in the past, but Gilliam said the local station would bring in the picture “clear as a bell.” “We feel we can give the people in this area a lot of service,” he said. Belton Woman Killed BELTON, )—Mrs. Willie Scott, Belton, was fatally injured yester day when the automobile in which she was riding collided with a bus. WORLD PREMIERING the new school record album “Music from Aggieland” will be A&M’s big music three: Aggie Band, Singing Cadets and the Aggieland Orchestra. New Aggie Record Premiere A&M’s world premiere for its new record album of Aggie songs and yells will be held tonight at 7:30 in Guion Hall, according to C. G. (Spike) White, director of recreation and entertainment of Student Activities. The program includes songs played by the Aggie Band and the Aggieland Orchestra, the Singing Cadets singing several of the new album numbers, introduction of the composers, presentation of the first record album to President Williams and introduction of mem bers of record album committee. During the playing of all numbers Toby Hughes will give off stage recording cues like an actual re cording session. “The program is a re-enactment of the actual recording of all the selections recorded in the album under conditions of which they were actually recorded in high fi delity,” said White. Records will be sold at the pre miere and if the purchaser wishes, autographed by the composers, White srid. The records will go on sale in T onight most of the local stoi’es Friday and will be sold by the following men in these dormitories; Bob Suroyik, Dorms 6 and 3; Pat Res- ley, Dorms 8 and 2; Charles Jenk ins, Dorms 15 and 17; Carl Hib- betts, Mitchell, Law and Puryear; Burt Thompson, Dorm 16, Milner and Leggett; Harry F. Sharp, Dorm 10 and Bizzell; Ronald Buford, Dorms I and II; Douglas Wilson Dorms 12 and 9; C. T. Kirksey, Dorms 4, 5 and Walton; Charles Voeltei 1 , Hart and Dorm 7 and Ed Bulkhead will sell to College View. Representing the commercial an gle of the new album in regard to market information, consumer at titude and other commercial points are Col. E. V. Adams, director of the Aggie Band; Miss Martha Britton, Shaffer’s Bookstore; Ed Burkhead, member of the Singing Cadets; Mrs. R. C. Fussell, Me morial Student Center Gift Shop; Dick Hervey, executive secretary of the Former Students Associa tion; Cyrus H. Holley, Aggie Band commander; Charles Jenkins, pres ident of the Singing Cadets; and W. M. Turner, director of the Singing Cadets. Chan SDX Awards To Be Given At Banquet Plan Vote to May 8 Debate on Issue Set for Tuesday Six scholarships and citations of merit will be presented to out standing journalism students Fri day night at 7:30 at the first an nual Sigma Delta Chi Awai-ds Ban quet in the Western Restaurant. Awards include two $100 schol arships to be given to a prospec tive sophomore and a prospective senior by the A&M Sigma Delta Chi Chapter, funds for which came from faculty magazine subscrip tion sales and the $100 scholar ship of the Texas Gulf Coast Press Association which will be given to a student interested in the non metropolitan newspapers. Also to be presented will be a $400 grant from the Wildlife Man agement Institute which will be used by a wildlife major to get a second degree in journalism. This is the first award of its kind, ac cording to Donald D. Burchard, SDX faculty sponsor. Journalism Department awards include a citation to a graduating senior for outstanding service to the profession and citations to the outstanding sophomore and junior students. Also to be presented will be two $500 .scholarships from 'the Clayton Fund which will be given to agricultural journalism majors. Two National Sigma Delta Chi awards, a citation for scholarship, to be given to a graduating sen ior in the top 5 per cent of bis class and a citation for achieve ment, will also be presented to a graduating senior. Also to be presented ai'e the monthly SDX Student Publica tions awards for the best news story, outstanding reporter, best magazine story, best sports story, best news feature, best photo graph and best local drawn car toon. By FRED MEURER The Corps-Civilian football seating feud comes to a head .next Wednesday when voting machines in the Memorial Student Center will open to a flow of Aggies, and perhaps by nightfall that day calm will once again have settled on the battle-scarred campus. In preparation for the ballot deciding whether cadets and civilians will be integrated in reserve seats or whether they will be seated together without reserve seats, a debate on the subject will be held in G. Rollie White Coliseum at 5 p.m., Tuesday. A team of tw T o will represent both sides at the discussion. Leading the cause for reserved seats and integration will ♦be John Specht and Joe Ross, senior senators. Vet CheckDeadtine Tomorrow is the deadline for veterans attending school under the GI Bill to sign for their April payroll forms without receiving their checks late. Jan Garber Plays For Ring Dance Jan Garber, one of the nations top dance orchestras, will play for this years Senior Ring Dance. He has appeared in many of the lead ing cities including the New Yorker Hotel in New York and the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago. Max E. Standsbury, Assistant Manager of the Industrial Relations Department for the Continental Oil Co., will be the guest speaker at the dance. Tickets for the Ring Dance will be $1.50 this year with the picture tickets selling for $2. Seniors may buy their tickets from any one of the following: Bob Crane, 1-417; John Aldridge, 2-219; Danney George, 3-128; Bob Best, 4-301; Ed Wyatt, 5-318; Ben Alcala, 6-317; Allen Newberry, 7-128; James Fitzwilliam, 8-317; John Heard, 9-228; Adrian Hackney, 10-101; Fritz Landers, 11-317 and Bill McCarty, 12-219. A1 Richey, dorm 14; Joe Joeris, dorm 15; Bob Opitz, 17-131; Billy Moore, 16-414; James Carnes, Puryear 6-B; Ed Pierson, Law 4-A; Jerry Coleman, Mitchell 1; Jon McFarland, Milner 73; Louis Castro, Leggett 22; Clay McFar land, Walton 1-111; Frank Gatlin, Hart D-6; Bobby Keith, Walton- athletics; and Wally Penberthy, Hart-athletics. All picture tickets must be pick ed up in the Office of Student Activities. Bizzell seniors may also buy dance tickets there. Representatives for the “con” side have not yet been chosen, though Tom Upchurch and Bill Markley have appointed a committee to choose the team. Purpose of the debate, said Ross, a member of the Student Senate, is to provide the opportunity for each student to understand both “pro” and “con” views on the plan and to help each man reach his own de cision. In addition to the debate, a Corps freshman meeting is planned for 4 p.m. Tuesday to clear all as pects of the question to them. Three advantages and the same number of disadvantages are con nected with integration, according to Ross. The advantages he lists include: (1) It will help create closer understanding and unity among the Corps and Civilians; (2) integration at out-of-town games has worked without any difficul ties or ill effects in the past; (3) it would be easier for the Athletic Department to sell tickets since an other division of ducats would have to be made. Disadvantages of the plan ac cording to Ross are: (1) Unity of the Corps would be destroyed; (2) Civilian students would have to ed ucate themselves; (3) neither group as a ’whole, Civilian or Corps, thinks the other has fewer Aggie qualities; each group just wants to sit by themselves; At the same time the seating vote takes place, members of next year’s Student Publications Board will be elected. Two men Baxter E. (Pete) Hogue and Bill W. Libby, are Corps candidates, while John F. Avant and Van W. Redman Jr. are Civilian candidates. CHS Play Cast * In State Finals At Austin Consolidated High School’s con test one-act play cast will present their play tonight at Austin in the Interscholastic League State Fi nals. The CHS cast, composed of Char les Delaplane, Bill Hite and Patsy Williams and directed by Robert L. Boone, compete against the other six top AA contest plays for the first place award. “The Proposal,” by Anton Che- kov won for CHS over three teams in both the district meet at Bren- ham and the Regional meet at Houston. This is the first year this play has been used by Con solidated in an Interscholastic Lea gue contest. “The Proposal” is a classical comedy involving a young lover (Bill Hite) who goes to propose to his sweetheart (Patsy Williams). Instead, they get into a fight and her father (Charles Delaplane) has to separate them. The setting is an American home around the year 1900. Tonight at Austin, the CHS group face the situation of com peting against the same play three times. “I Remember Mama,” which Lamar, of Houston, won first with last year, is the entry of three of the state finalists. The CHS play is sandwiched between two of the “I Remember Mama” presentations. BULLETIN Marshall P. Magers, Senior pre paratory veterinary medicine ma jor from Barry, died in his sleep early this morning. Silver Taps will be held tonight at 10:30. Magers, 36-year old Air Force veteran, lived in Mitchell Hall. Weather Today Yesterday’s rainfall was .33 of an inch. High temperature yes terday was 74, and low last night was 64. Temperature at 11:15 this morning was 72 degrees. Today’s forecast calls for broken clouds with scattered light rain showers this afternoon.