f ■ The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas PAGE 2 Thursday, January 9, 1958 Editorials Keep the Spirit Last night’s demonstration was probably a negative reaction to a suggested plan for gradual co-education in cluding preservation of A&M’s heritage. If it was, and such negative attitudes continue, inevi table co-education will bring with it an entirely different college program. For without such a gradual preparation for coeds with students as planners and participants, the best traditions of Aggieland can never be transmitted to the new atmos phere. Do the protests mean the instigators prefer a new col lege program and prefer not to work for the benefits and assets of a co-educational A&M maintaining the Spirit of Aggieland ? Probably not. It more likely means a refusal to face the realities of an eventual co-educational A&M. No one can be foolish enough to say the instigators don’t like girls. It’s merely that they don’t want to go to school with them because they fear the damage to A&M traditions. They just can’t see that there is a gray and everything is not either black or white. A&M can have coeds and tra ditions as it can have a strong Corps and a strong Civilian student body. There’s no need for making any one of the three dominant. Every Aggie who wants to preserve A&M’s heritage need not be against co-education or against optional mili tary training. A&M’s identity will be preserved not because it’s all male, all-military or even all-civilian. It’s identity will be retained only if the Spirit of Aggieland glows and grows in Aggie hearts and is transmitted to every new student, male or female. Editor’s Note: The two following editorials appeared in the latest issue of The Texas A&M Engineer and are be ing published for The Battalion readers by permission of the editor of The Engineer. Is Required Corps Fair? The Corps is compulsory again! For better or worse, this is a matter of opinion, and only time will give the true answer. But there is a deeper question posed by this decision. Should students be required to take part in an extra cur ricular activity in order to attend a school ? That pat answer, “If you don’t like it, leave,” gives little consolation. It is at best a poor, dogmatic, excuse, and certainly not a tolerant, open-minded view. Many Aggies are frank to admit they came to A&M because it is the only school they can afford. Others feel that A&M offers the best education in their particular field. A compulsory Corps is grossly unfair to these students. There is no reason to require a student to put up with the discipline and traditions of the Corps in order to get a col lege degree, regardless of whether they are of benefit to him or not. Little Man on campus Books “fUaraSKAFMY MAGAZINES? SoMB student IN H2R5 HAS TH£M AUL checkep OUT." What’s Cooking The following- clubs and or ganizations meet tonight: 7:15 The Flax County Hometown Club meets in Room 306, Aca demic Building for a very short business meeting. 7:30 Yankee Hometown Club meets on the fourth floor of the Aca demic Building. Plans for tak ing the club picture will be made. Del Rio Hometown Club meets in the YMCA to discuss a picture and party. Spring Branch Hometown Club will meet in Room 227 of the Academic Building. Bell County Hometown Club meets in Room 206 Academic for their regular meeting. Wheeler-Collinsworth Club will meet in the YMCA. Deep East Texas Hometown Club meets in Room 105 of the Academic for an important called meeting. Northeast Texas Hometown Reviews Begin ROTC Picture Changes On This Page Aggies who have been faced with the decision of whether to take advanced ROTC or not have had the ques tion clarified for them. With the decision by the School of Engineering to no longer give credit for advanced ROTC, these courses lose their status of three easy hours and a good grade. There is not as much reason for engineering students to take ROTC as there once was. The rewards hardly war rant the effort. The six hours of classes per week, and possibly two more hours studying, can be put to much bet ter use. If the student is seeking a military career why take engineering in the first place? There are easier ways to get a college degree. Some of these other ways give credit for ROTC besides. So, a somewhat foggy question is now clearer.—-GMR Attention " ' J Seniors! Big Graduation Sale On Now! The Battalion, beginning to day, will be presenting reviews of books and movies from time to time on this page for the en joyment of its readers. Today, the reviews begin with a synopsis of the controversial best-selling novel, “Peyton Place” by Grace Metalious, a young housewife. Several Aggies may have had the privilege of seeing the movie during the holidays. It showed New Year’s Eve in both Dallas and Houston. Hope you enjoy the reviews. y Any make, any model, sports cars or family cars. NO DOWN PAYMENT — 36 months to pay Bank rates of interest. New car warranty on new cars. 100% warranty on all used cars. C'enlury ™ Co. 423 S. Main, Bryan TA 3-2524 Sex In Small Town Examined By Book County Hometown in the YMCA North Club meets in Room 127 Academ ic for the last meeting of the semester. Kaufman Club meets Solarium. H-J-S-K-F Hometown Club meets in Room 108 Academic for a meeting to discuss plans for the club picture. Galveston County Hometown Club will meet in Room 126 Aca demic to discuss plans for a party between semesters. Lubbock-South Plains Home town Club meets in Room 208 Academic. Tyler-Smith County Hometown Club meets in Room 3-D of the Memorial Student Center. By WELTON JONES If authoress Grace Metalious’ assertations in “Peyton Place,” her rambling, out-sized combina tion of sex and sagacity mixed in New England, are to be taken seriously, it is time to move our impressionable youth from the small towns of America and into the tamer metropolitan areas. Peyton Place, boasting a pop ulation of 3,675, is located in Maine or thereabouts and is so full of family skeletons that even the town’s name is a source of mystery and shame. It was named, it seems, after a wealthy shipping baron, who transplanted an English castle and a French bx-ide to the nearby hills in the early 19th century. The shipping baron was a Negro. And the 3,675 people! One would have to search long to as semble such a collection of “char acters” anywhere else, but they seem to vie with each other for space in Peyton Place. We find murder, hard drink ing, petty thievery, manslaugh ter, blasphemy, suicide and, above all, SEX. Sex, unnatural and natural, unchaste and chaste, within marriage and outside, near-incestuous rape and tender young seduction, Oedipus com plexes, homosexuality, sadism and much more, designed to suit the most discriminating taste. THURSDAY & FRIDAY ‘Shoot-Out at Medicine Bend” With Randolph Scott Plus “A Face In The Crowd” With Andy Griffith THROUGH SATURDAY ^Care less Years” Dean Stockwell Also “Street Of Sinners” George Montgomery Saturday Prevue SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY Cary GRANT 3 Jayne MANSFIELD WMSMuzy PARKER] fCfSS THE/H FOR tVIEL" 20th C«ntury-Fox Picture THURSDAY & FRIDAY Also f if . . m BEwil a REGALSCOPE picture A Regal Films, Inc. Production Behind this orgy of carnality, however, are some interesting- ideas about how and why people work as they do. Also Mrs. Me talious, a rather dumpy thirtyish matron usually pictured wearing blue jeans, displays an engaging- command of prose from time to time. Twentieth-Century - Fox - Wald studios have made the book into a technicolor movie which has drawn guarded praise from most reviewers. Most seem to agree that the movie is a bit better than its inspiration, if less bawdy. It stars Lana Turner, Betty Field, Lloyd Nolan, Mildred Dun- nock, Arthur Kennedy and new comers Lee Philips, Diane Varsi, Hope Lange and Russ Tamblyn, all of whom are reported to be well cast. The story roughly concerns a “widow” who never was married and her sensitive daughter bat ting their heads against the walls of the town, from the inside. A new principal for the school comes to town and marries the widow and all stride off happily into the sunset. In between these happenings, we have diversions such as those listed above presented by a cast of 3,675. i CATERING =7 Special CDccaiiom * OUTFIT PARTIES A- CLUB BANQUETS MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5089 200 Congress TA 3-4375 CIRCLE THROUGH FRIDAY ‘‘The Sun Also Rises” Tyrone Power ALSO “The Big Land” Alan Ladd SATURDAY ONLY “Santiago” Alan Ladd And “Gun The Man Down” James Arness PLUS “Delinquents” ..Ote* Girls, girls, everywhere but here. And it seems no one here wants them ... at A&M, anyway. But if they are to come, We must prepare for them. Here’s -i couple of ideas on. how to- avoid contact with these girl type crea tures. • Forget about a corner room .. . . try to persuade the housing office to let you live in a gun room ... they have bar s on the windows. • Sign up only for courses like home economics or bee keep ing . . . the girls will be crowding into the more masculine type sub jects ... to be near the fellows. • Go home every chance, you have . . . avoid those girls. ★ ★ At the “bonfire” last night, someone goofed. To swell the meager stack of Batts burned in the new Corps area, a few un-controversial type newspapers were included, name ly the Houston Post and the Dal las News. What ho, Charlie Brown? A&M MENS SHOP 103 MAIN — NORTH GATE AGGIE OWNED PAMCE Bryan 2-W*) TODAY THRU SATURDAY A WHITE SQUAW STOLEN^ FROM AN APACHE CHIEF... AND NOW THE MASSACRE WAS ON! TlOOPIRl HOOK QUEEN Now Showing “We Are AU Murderers’ 1 SUFER-WIWSTOM PRODUCTIONS lifi PRESENTS' IN THE U THE HFAPJ-mmmG STORY OF A I SIMPLE GLADIATOR ...YOU CANTTELLTHE GLADIATORS' WITHOUT A THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those of the stu dent writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enterprise edited and operated by students as a community newspaper and is gov erned by the student-faculty Student Publications Board at Texas A. & M. College. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A & M., is published in Colleg Station, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday period; September through May, and once a week during summer school. Faculty members of the Student Publications Board are Dr. Carroll D. Laverty, Chairman; Prof. Donald D. Burchard; Prof. Kobert M. Stevenson; and Mr. Bennie Zinn. Student members are W. T. Williams, John Avant, : officio members are Mr. Charles A, Roeber; and Ross Strader, Seci tor of Student Publications. in; illly W. Libby. ary and Direc- IN THIS CORNER FRANKIE APOLLO' ■r TpoEE-io rounds .J TERRIBLE CARTHAGINIAN ^ V5 FRANK APOLLO ^ Mail subscriptions are S3.50 per semester, S6 year. Advertising rates College Station, Texas. ar. Advertising rates furnished on request. Address; er, S6 pe: ddress; T1 school year, S6.50 he Battalion, per full Room 4, YMCA, Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office in College Station, Texas, under the Act of Con gress of March 3, 1870. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Ass’n Associated Collegiate Press Represented nationally by N a 11 o n a 1 Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los An geles, and San Francisco. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous origin published herein. Rights of republication of all other matter here in are also resex-ved. Ne the edi ;ws contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 or at torial office. Room 4. YMCA; For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. JOE TINDEL Editor Jim Neighbors Managing Editor FRANKIE IE TALKINCTO CARTHAGINIAN 4 CRUSH-QggQF BOX. TOO- CftCS WQWf P J. PCYNOLDS T0BSCC0 CO., winston.saum.n.c.