Weather Partly cloudy today and cooler from 82 - 62 degrees. « BATTALION Published Daily on the Texas A&M College Campus 9 Days 'til Final Review Number 118: Volume 58 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1959 Price Five Cents Now Is The Time With final examinations less than two books. However, it looks as if he may have weeks away, one Aggie shows that he firmly overexerted himself in the study department, believes that now is the time to hit the and could now hit the sack. Former Student to Address Ring Banquet Saturday Night A. 0. Saengrer, ’32, of the Hum ble Oil and Refining Co., will be the principle speaker at the annual Senior Ring Banquet in Duncan Dining Hall Saturday evening at 6, John Sackett, social secretary of the Class of ’59, said yesterday. Following the banquet will be the Senior Ring Dance from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. in Sbisa Dining Hall to highlight the evening’s activit ies. Special guests at the banquet and dance will include President and Mrs. M. T. Harrington, Vice President and Mrs. Earl Rudder, Aggie Generosity Keeps ‘Rev’ Eatin’ Reveille can eat in fine style for the rest of the year, thanks to generous Aggies. Announcements were made in the dining halls Monday and Tuesday that funds for keeping Rev had run out. Receptacles were put outside the doors, and students .were encouraged to help the mascot. The result was $90»84 do nated over the two-day period. According to Jerry Brown, Sec ond Regiment, Third Battalion staff senior, the donation will get A Quartermaster out of debt and will carry over into next year. Wade Dover, Corps Staff junior petroleum enginering major from San Angelo, was elected command er of the Ross Volunteer Company for 1959-60 at a meeting in the lecture room of the Biological Sciences Building yesterday. A Squadron 14 junior, Hubert Oxford, mechanical engineering major from Beaumont, was named executive officer. Calvin Hines, A Infantry jun ior history major from San An tonio was elected administrative officer. Platoon leaders are Lester Nich ols, Corps staff physics major from Quitman; Joe Deeper, Squad ron 1 general business major from Dickinson; and Jon Pierce from Pilot Point, mechanical engineer ing major in C Field Artillery. Don Alexander, B Field Artil lery business administration maj or from Dickinson was named first segeant for next year. Mel Glasscock, present com mander of the RV’s said that yes terday’s meeting would be the last the Executive Committee of the college, unit faculty advisers and other college officials. Gary Pepper, president of the senior class, will act as master of ceremonies at the banquet. Stephen Paul Voinis, vice presi dent, will introduce the special guests. The invocation will be delivered by Len Domey. Steve Edminston, historian, will read the senior class history. Sackett will introduce Saenger. Special entertainment at the banquet will be provided by The Silvertones, an all Aggie singing quartet. Six hundred and fifty tickets have been sold for the dance, Sac- Election of Vanity Fair winners, Student Publications staff awards and the awarding of watches to outgoing editors will highlight ac tivities at the annual Student Pub lications Banquet in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center tomorrow at 6:45 p.m. Also on tap for the evening will be awards from The Battalion to outstanding personalities on the official meeting this year and the newly elected officers would take over their positions next Septem ber. Wade Dover . . .RV commander kett said. Tickets are now on sale in the Office of Student Ac tivities, second floor of the YMCA and will be available at the door Saturday night. Music for the dance will be pro vided by the band of Jimmy Dor sey under the direction of Lee Castle. Highlighting the dance will be the taking of ring pictures in the two large mock Aggie rings from 8-12. As each senior has his picture made in the ring, his date will turn his ring around on his finger. Tickets for pictures are green and white. The green ticket desig nates that the senior will have his picture made in Ring A and the white ticket is for Ring B. campus, the Southwestern Veter inarian awards to outstanding staff members and the introduc tion of 1959-60 editors. Six Vanity Fair winners will be selected by the 250-member aud ience and will be announced at the annual Senior Ring Dance Sat urday. Wrist or pocket watches will be presented to the six retiring edi tors. They will be appropriately engraved with the editor’s names, their publications and the periods they served. Corps students attending the banquet have been authorized by Col. Joe E. Davis, commandant, to wear coats and ties. Tickets are available until noon tomorrow in the Student Publica tions Office at $1 for staff mem bers and $2 for invited guests. Keys will be presented to 120 students publications staff mem bers. Pictures of the Vanity Fair entries, their names and the names of their escorts will ap pear in tomorrow’s edition of The Battalion. The twelve entries were picked by a committee from the staff of the Aggieland ’59. Graduation Notices Are Still Available Extra graduation announcements went on sale this morning at the Department of Student Activities, said W. L. Penberthy, director of Student Activities. Penberthy also said that the an nouncements would be sold on a first-come, first-serve basis. He urged seniors who have not yet picked up their announcements to do so as soon as possible. RV Company Picks Dover to Command Student Publication Annual Banquet Set Soviets Asked to Talk For European Peace Architects Give Yearly Awards Tuesday Night Twenty-one architecture students shared in numerous medals, certif icates, books and $2,250 in cash at the annual awards dinner oi the Division of Architecture held Tuesday night in the Ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. Recipients of the outstanding freshman and outstanding junior faculty awards were Ricardo Her nandez and David L. Alexander. The $250 Tile Council of Amer ica Scholarship for Design was presented to John T. Hargis, and the $250 Tile Council of America Scholarship for Construction to Larry L. Claycomb. The Tile Council of America awards went to John R. Hampton, $30; John F. Mills, $10; and Larry L. Claycomb, $10. The Fox and Jacobs Construction award of $100 was received by John R. Heubinger. The Fox and Jacobs Design awards went to Jim mie R. Patterson, $60 and William T. Cannady, $40. The J. Rodney Tabor Award of $200 was won by John F. H. Wood. The Otis A. Felger and Lynn Allison Memorial Award, sponsor ed by Lift Slab Inc. was shared by J. Van Cudd and Jack R. Yard- lay. They each received $40. Sec ond place of $20 went to David L. Atteberry. Dale J. Hutton won the $250 Davidson Fellowship Award for Design. The Davidson Fellowship for Construction, a $250 award, was won by John Deithloff. William T. Ellis won the K. Frank Robinson Memorial Award, a $25 certificate. Other men who won certificates were Gaynsel R. Grigsby, who was presented the Langford Award for Construction, ahd Larry G. Garrison, who won the Langford Award for Design. CSC Members To Elect Officers At MeetingTonight The newly elected members to the Civilian Student Council will assemble for the first time tonight in the Senate Chamber of the Me morial Student Center and elect officers for next year. Before the new Council con venes, the 1958-59 Council will hold its last meeting at 7:15 and hear a report from the chaplain Selection committee, a report on the Student Senate meeting last Thurs day and a report from the execu- tice committee. Her ter’s Challenge Rejected by Reds GENEVA (IP)—Secretary of State Christian A. Herter challenged the Soviet Union yesterday to enter serious ne gotiations for concrete, self-enforcing agreements for Ep**)- pean peace, but drew no encouragement from Andrei Gromy ko. The Soviet foreign minister rejected in advance the West’s package plan for solution of the Berlin, Germany unity and European security issues. Gromyko called the package plan, due to be presented in the Big Four foreign ministers conference Thursday, an attempt “to muddle together various political problems in to one tangle.” He declared such an approach would com- ♦•pletely block the work of the o. 1 ■ conference. Mudents thosen For A&M Science Enrichment Event Twenty-four students from 21 Texas high schools have been chosen for the Summer Science Enrichment Program for high ability second school students to be held at A&M, June 8 to July 11. Dr. C. C. Doak, head of the De partment of Biology, is director of the program which is being spon sored through a grant from the National Science Foundation. The 24 students were selected from among more than 160 nom inations submitted by high school principals and . superintendents. Selection was on the basis of high ability, performance records and interest in the biological sciences, including medicine, research and teaching. The students wil arrive on the campus June 7 and will be housed in college dormitories dur ing the five-week period. Summer Students Must Record Autos All students attending summer school will need to register their automobiles at the Campus Secur ity Office, ground floor, YMCA, Fred L. Hickman, chief of Campus Security, said yesterday. If a student knows where he will live, he can register for the summer beginning Monday, said Hickman. The wives of students who work for the college and whose husbands will not be a student in either summer semester may pick up their special permits without cost. These permits will be issued any time beginning Monday, Hickman added. Fireman’s School Set for July 19-24 The 13th annual Fireman’s Training School will be held on the campus July 19-24, with approx imately 1,400 firemen expected for a week of intensive training. These men will represent 425 Texas cities, industries and mili tary installations. Last year 15 states were represented in addi tion to Texas. About 200 experienced instruc tors will work with the students. Students will be assigned to small groups for individual in- structon in their specific course. They will use all types of equip ment to control various types of fires. They will disassemble and overhaul apparatus and equip ment. Some will attend classes for technical information and observe demonstrations or practice teach ing with other students. All types of approved fire fight ing apparatus and visual training aids are furnished by manufactur ers and distributors. Several of the major oil com panies will furnish fuel for pit and tank fires. In addition four houses and several other buildings will be burned in structural fire-fighting training, according to Henry D. Smith, chief of the Fireman’s Training School. Men will be assigned rooms in college dormitories on Sunday, July 19 and will be given meals in college dining hall starting with breakfast Monday. Total expenses per man will be $39.50, said Smith. Registration will be held at the Memorial Student Center noon Sunday at 10 p.m. and on Mon day from 7-8 a.m. Advance regis tration will not be necessary ac cording to Smith. Herter got the conference down to business as chairman of the third day of a session previously snarled by Soviet pro cedural moves. He announced the United States, Britain and Fi’ance will introduce proposals to ease tension “now spoiling relations between the free world and the Soviet Union.” He promised U.S. participation in summit talks, which Moscow has been urging if the Soviets will dicker here in earnest. All four ministers finally pre sented their opening speeches, de layed by a dispute over Gromyko’s efforts to seat Communist Poland and Czechoslovakia as full nego tiators in the conference. Gromyko persisted yesterday but got nowhere. Sociology Head Leaving June 1 On World Trip Dr. Daniel Russell, head of the Division of Rural Sociology in the Department of Agricultural Eco nomics and Sociology, will leave June 1 for a second trip around the world as Program Officer of the International Voluntary Serv ices of Washington, D. C. The trip will take him to more than 20 countries in Europe, Afri ca and Asia. There his job will be to visit and advise the teams and see if additional teams in other countries are desired or needed. He will return in time for the open ing of classes in September. The Intei'national Voluntary Services is made up of represen tatives of about 12 major religious bodies. The organization sends teams of young college graduates under an adult leader to live in the villages of underdeveloped coun tries to help improve the life of the people with special emphasis on agriculture, health, education and minor public works. Russell will go first to Washing ton, D. C., where he will meet with the Board of International Vol untary Services, and from there will go east from New York. He will return by way of San Francis co in September. Sam Houston Beauty Juanita Wolfe, a 5-5 brunette from Sam Houston State Teachers College, is a contestant in the Bryan Miss Uni verse beauty contest tonight at the Townshire Shopping Center. The winner of the contest will be named Miss Bra zos County of 1959 and represent the area in the Texas Miss Universe contest at Lake Whitney.