Weather Today Forecast for the College Station area is partly cloudy today and Saturday, cloudy and warmer Sunday. Low tonight 33. High Saturday 45. ™ BATTALION Published Daily on the Texas A&M College Campus Ags vs Bears Tomorrow Number 67: Volume 58 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1959 Price Five Cents Nothing Definitely Set 12th Man Bowl, Parking Aches Hit By Student Senate By FRED MEURER Battalion Managing Editor Problems and activities ranging from car registration and its con sequences to the 12th Man Bowl were bounced around by the Stu dent Senate last night, although no final lines of action were drawn on any of the issues. This year’s 12th Man Bowl, pit ting Air Force and Army cadet football teams, will be held either on March 6 or 13, the Senate de cided. One man from each Corps unit and four residents of each civilian dormitory may try out for the teams on a date which will be announced later. President John Thomas said some voluntary aid has already been offered to make arrangements for the Senate-sponsored scuffle and that more will be sought soon. This is the first time in recent years that Civilians will partici pate in the contest. Parking Discussed In an attempt to ease pressure on a sore spot felt by students, the Senate renewed an attack on “inadequate” parking facilities for students, an issue that has been hovering in the air since last Sep tember. In a report from Bill Myers, jhairman of the Issues Committee, it was learned that a string of traffic sub-committees is still awaiting a meeting with Campus Security. The Senate first entered the picture in September when Campus Security asked that a traf- The Ross Volunteers—75 men strong—will take part Tuesday in the famous Mardi Gras Parade held annually in New Orleans, La. The RV’s, who leave Saturday, will serve as honor guard for King Rex. Also on the agenda is the Rex Ball Tuesday night and a lun cheon in a French Quarter res taurant as the guest of the New Orleans A&M Club. The Mardi Gras trip is an annual affair for the RV’s and is financed entirely by individual members, with the exception of housing, which has been arranged for at Camp Leroy Johnson. RV officers include Melbern G. Glasscock, commander, mechanical fic committee be set up to study phases of the problem. Myers’ com mittee took over the task. According to Thomas, Campus Security appointed members of the committee at that time to appraise various auto-connected conflicts on the campus and promised to call a conference with them later. Thom as said the meeting had still not been called. Since September, M,yers and Harley MsAdams have graded each parking lot on the campus as to if and when they should be paved or otherwise improved. However, the issue is still at a stalemate, they reported. Thomas said the Senate would delve into the problem anew to find out just where student registration and parking violation monies are going. Other Business Don Rummel, chairman of the Welfare Committee, reported that five per cent of the Campus Chest had been given to the March of Dimes, bringing the total of wel fare grants to 35 per cent. Five per cent still remains to be allo cated according to a budget set up at the beginning of the year. Thomas told the Senate five Bay lor students would visit the campus Saturday to renew discussion of the A&M-Baylor student fracas in Waco after a basketball game last month. The group will meet with five Aggies in an attempt to ease tensions between the two schools. (See related story, below, columns 5 and 6.) engineering major from Houston; Herbert E. Whalen, executive offi cer, petroleum and geological en gineering major from Beeville; Robert F. Hunter, administrative officer, senior civil engineering major from Dallas. Walter F. Kappel, platoon lead er, civil engineering major from New Braunfels; Jack N. McCrary, platoon leader, mechanical engi neering major from Midland; George R. Curtis, platoon leader, business administration major from Pearsall; Robert F. Turner, first sergeant, electrical engineer ing major from San Antonio. The RV’s will return to Aggie- land Wednesday. College Given Biglmprovment ViaFace-Lifting A series of improvements in landscape and inside dormitories have made Aggieland a little easier on the eye and brightened the en vironmental atmosphere. Shrubs planted in the New Corps Area during the past holidays and last week have reduced a former noted drabness in the Cadet hous ing section. The bushes were in stalled along Dorms 2, 4 and 6. In addition, the bugle stand and flagpole, standing all alone in the center of the quadrangle between Dorms 1 and 2, have been encircl ed by new shrubbery as well as a gravel path leading to and around them. Before the holidays, new side walks were laid around Mitchell Hall, and others were added in front of Sbisa Dining Hall. Venetian blinds costing approx imately $8,936.11 have been in stalled recently in several build ings on the campus, according to Raymond L. Rogers, assistant man ager in the Office of Physical Plants. A College Station firm hung $6,- 122.95 worth of blinds in Dorm 6, 12 and 14, Milner and Leggett. Rogers said nine of the “Shacks” (temporary classrooms) also were adorned with blinds by an Austin firm which was awarded a $2, 813.16 contract for the work by the College Board of Control. It was learned Wednesday that Milner Hall will be completely ren ovated to the tune of about $10,- 000. Students living in the dorm itory will vacate their rooms Sat urday and move to Dorm 16 so that the work can be done. CORRECTION The Valentine’s Dance will be in the living room of Capps Hall from 8-11 p.m. Saturday at Tex as Woman’s University, Denton. In a story which appeared in The Battalion yesterday the headline said the dance would be Friday night at 8. As in the past the Aggies have been invited to this annual dance, according to John Sackett, Class of ’59 social chairman. The dance will be a semi-for mal affair for girls and formal for Aggies. Dates will be on a first-come- first-served basis. But Aggies who want to make sure of a date can do so by rushing a date application to the date bureau at Tessieland. These applications are available in Room 210 of the YMCA. The University band will pro vide music for the dance. Ross Volunteers to Leave! For Mardi Gras Saturday! Religious Emphasis Week To Be Held Feb. 15-20 Feb. 15 marks the beginning of the 17th annual Religious Empha sis Week on the A&M campus. Each night at 7:15, 15 dorm counseloi’s will be available for group discussions on topics of in terest as shown in the results of the interest locators handed out to students earlier this year. In addition to these men, Dr. James Wood, professor at Baylor University will lead faculty forums and discussion groups in the YMCA. Dr. Robert Ledbetter, director of the Wesley Foundation in Austin will lead the forums and discus sion groups for the married stu dents, also in the YMCA. The convocation speaker for this year will be Dr. Ernest Remley, Pastor of the Collegiate Presby terian Church of Ames, Iowa. Dr. Remley will deliver speeches in Guion Hall Monday at 11 a.m., Tuesday and Wednesday at 10 a.m. and Thursday and Friday at 9 a.m. Born in Boulder, Colo., Dr. Rem ley graduated from Colorado State Univei’sity in 1940, earned his Bachelor of Divinity at McCormick Seminary in 1943, his M.S.Th. de gree from Northwestern Univer sity, and his Th. D. from the Bibli cal Seminary of New York in 1948. During and following the war years, he was a Chaplain in the United States Navy. During 1952 he was a chaplain in the U. S. Army. In 1956 he received the Distin guished Service Award from the Ames Junior Chamber of Com merce, and in 1957 he received the ROTC Award from Iowa State Col lege for distinguished service from Scabbard and Blade, an honorary military fraternity. Dr. Remley has served as speak- Three A&M Men Plan AF Research Three A&M men have returned from Florida, where they discuss ed future meteorological instru mentation research with Air Force officials. Dr. William H. Clayton, Dr. Vance E. Moyer and Archie Kahan met recently with U. S. Air Force representatives at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida to discuss pro posed research in meteorological instrumentation. Clayton is an assistant profes sor of physical oceanography and Moyer is a associate professor of meteorology. Kahan is executive director of the A&M Research Foundation. er in Religious Emphasis Weeks at Jamestown College, Colorado State College, Missouri University, Wisconsin University, Missouri Valley and Buena Vista. Dr. Rem ley will live in the Board Rooms. Dorms 6 and 8 discussion gx*oups will be led by Rev. Jack H. Prich ard, pastor of the Hemphill Pres byterian Church, Fort Worth. These meetings will be held in the lounge of Dorm 8. Rev. Prichard was born in Breck- enridge, 'attended Oklahoma City University and graduated from the Presbyterian Theological Seminary at Princeton, New Jersey. He has served pastorates in Oklahoma and and New Mexico and was minister to students at the University of Arizona, in Tucson. Dr. Wood, faculty forum leader, is a native Virginian and holds both Th. M. and Th. D. degrees from the Southern Baptist Theo logical Seminary. He has further ed his studies at the University of Tennessee and Yale University. He is the author of A History of American Literature: An Anthol ogy, co-author of Church and State: in Scripture, History and Constitutional Law and has written several articles in scholarly jour nals. Officials Tab A&M ‘Poor Boys’ School’ Area Around Flagpole Renovated During the between semester holidays, workmen from the College Physical Plant worked busily to lay an artistic floor around the flagpole and bugle stand between Dorms 1 and 2. Bushes were also planted around the area. Shown above is Thursday’s cadet guard, composed of, (left to right), Cadet Cpl. Jerry Castleberry, A Chemical; Cadet Sgt. Newton Lamb, Squadron 6; and Cadet Pvt. Guy Story, Squadron 15. 4 Entremont Success ^ String Quartet Plays Tonite In Arts Show By GAYLE McNUTT Executive News Editor The next three days will wind up an array of talent which is probably the greatest spectacle of the arts ever witnessed in a given week on the A&M campus. The Hollywood String Quartet, four Hollywood film studio music ians who began playing quartets together as a hobby and later be came famous, tonight at 8 will mark the sixth performance in the first annual A&M Fine Arts Fes tival. Playing in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom, the quar tet is a MSC Recital Series pre sentation, its fourth of the season. The Hollywood String Quartet first became known through their recordings and was invited to play at the Edinborough Festival of 1957. This performance was fol lowed by a trans-continental tour which spread their fame through out the nation. All four membes of the quartet have a wide musical background and each still plays the first chair position in one of the major studio orchestras. Individually, their musical records include conduct ing, concert soloist and member ship in major orchestras. Making up the group are Felix Slatkin, first violinst; Paul Shure, second violinist; Alvin Dinkin, vio list; and Eleanor Aller, the only female in the quartet, bass viol. Entremont Shines Last night, Phillipe Entremont, 24-year-old French pianist now on his fifth transcontinental tour, dis played his talents in the MSC ball room. Despite his youth, Entre mont showed the dexterity of a master in an extremely polished performance. But a look at the record of the young pianist makes his brilliant performance quite cieax\ After be coming Laureate in the interna tional Long-Thibaud competition, held annually in Paris, at the age of 16, Entremont at 19 became First Laureate and Grand Prize winner in the international Mar guerite Long-Jacquest Thibaud competition. He now holds an ex clusive recording conti’act with Co lumbia Masterworks. ‘Antigone’ Repeats The string quartet will conclude the musical performances for the Fine Arts festival, but the final curtain won’t go down on the week-long parade of events until the Aggie Players conclude their third performance of “Antigone” Sunday afternoon in the MSC Ball room. The Players’ first performance of Sophocles’ famous Greek ti’agedy Tuesday night recorded a shining success as voiced by the audience. The curtain will rise at 8 p.m. Sat urday on their second production of the recital reading of the tragedy in a new translation by Theodore Howard Banks, professor of Eng lish and Greek scholar at Wes- lyan University in Middletown, Conn. Sunday’s production begins at 3 p.m. The first presentation of the full week of entertainment in all phases of the fine arts opened Sunday af- Student leaders from Baylor and A&M will meet Saturday at 3:30 p.m. in the Birch Room of the Me morial Student Center to thrash out the growing “tension” which has arisen between the two schools The meeting was called at a prev ious joint meeting between the schools on Jan. 16 in which stu dents and staff from here met with W. C. Perry, dean of men at Bay lor and two of his assistants. At the request of W. L. Penberthy, director of Student Activities, ac tion to prevent further demonstra tions like the one on the Baylor campus Jan. 9 was defei'red until students from both schools could talk the problem over. At 5 p.m. yesterday plans were made to limit the attendance at the meeting to students only. Af ter the discussion both groups will ternoon with Hungarian tenor Les lie Chabay, a former member of the Metropolitan Opera Co., and now a recitalist and soloist. His renditions before a sparse but ap preciative audience can be called highly successful. Boston Pops Were Tops And a delighted audience left the Boston Pops orchestra, under the baton of Arthur Fiedler, with little doubt of their success. The versatile orchestra, playing the kind of music “the public wants to hear,” was by far the largest drawing card of the week. A crowd of more than 4,000 heard the orchestra Monday night in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Wednesday’s lecture on fine arts by Amy Freeman Lee, noted au thority on the subject rounded out the week’s events and was one of the week’s most educational pre sentations to art lovers. Her speaking appeal has been illustra ted through more than 500 lectures from the platform, radio, and tele vision over the past 10 years. have dinner with representatives from both schools in the MSC. The students presenting Baylor’s side of the situation have not yet been named. Accoi’ding to Perry, however, they will be made up of the president of Baylor’s student body, president of their Chamber of Commerce, a representative from their weekly newspaper, The Larait, their head cheerleader and one athlete. Six Aggies will sit in on the conference. They are John Thomas, president of the Student Senate; Joseph (Jake) Sekerka, vice presi dent of the Senate; Charles Gra ham, vice pesident of the Civilian Student Council and ex-officio member of the Senate; Don Cloud, Corps commander; J. C. Burton, acting sergeant major; and Joe Buser, editor of The Battalion. Baylor Fracas on Agenda For Meeting Here Saturday Administrators Ask for Added Financial Help By The Associated Press AUSTIN — A&M officials pointed to their college yester day as^a “poor boys’ school.” “It’s the cheapest place I know to go to school,” Vice President Earl Rudder told the House Appropriations Committee. Rudder, President M. T. Harr ington and numerous members of the A&M board asked the com mittee to appropriate $5,300,000 a year from the general revenue fund for the college instead of the $4,200,000 recommended by the Legislative Budget Board. The budget board did not recom mend any increase in teaching salaries, which Harrington said was the paramount problem. “We like to think that if a boy really wants to go to college he can afford to go to A&M,” Rudder said. “Tuition is the same at all state colleges, but at A&M room and board costs only $1.87 a day.” Freshmen and sophomores get a federal clothing allowance because military instruction is compulsory the first two years. “Then there is not all the social activity and not all the things to do like at the other schools,” Rud der said. “Instead of running around at night our students are supposed to be studying with a CQ (charge of quarters) watching them.” Harrington and Rudder were asked if they thought hazing at A&M in past years, the compul sory military participation, and the Aggies’ success or lack of success in athletics had any effect on the size of the freshman class. “Statistics won’t prove there is any effect,” Harrington said. “I hope athletic success isn’t tied to the size of the freshman class,” Rudder said. Rudder was asked several ques tions about hazing. He said there was nothing now but “mental haz ing”—such as making freshmen pass food to upperclassmen before helping themselves. “We ride herd on it and stay on it pretty good,” Rudder said. “Every day I get a report on my desk of any freshman who resigns, and I look into each one.” Aggie officials and board mem bers stood up for the compulsory military training which was rein stated last September after a lapse of several years. However, some parents expect too much, they said. “Some parents expect us to take a freshman and do in just 414 months what they have failed to do in 18 years,” Rudder said. In addition to Harrington and Rudder, A&M executives present included W. C. Freeman, System Comptroller; C. A. Roeber, college business manager, and directors H. B. Zachry, E. B. Darby, A. E. Cud- lipp, and Price Campbell. Saturday Last Day To Add Courses Tomorrow is the last day for students to add courses, for the Spring Semester, according to H. L. Heaton, registrar. A student who desires to change any course in which he is currently registered must ob tain the written recommendation of the head of each department concerned and the approval of the dean of his school. Any course dropped after Sat urday, Feb. 14, shall normally carry a grade of “F”, Heaton said. Guide Posts “The only thing worse than be ing talked about is not being talked about.”—Oscar Wilde