Harrington says “Many questions have been raised concerning- the recent ruling by the Board of Directors that military training will be required of enter ing students beginning with the fall of 1958,” President M. T. Har rington said today. “It seems quite clear that the Board of Directors has established this ruling so that futui-e students of A&M College shall have both strong military and strong aca demic training. "The ruling regarding required military training applies only to students entering with freshman classification in September 1958 and thereafter. These students, ac cording to the Board ruling, will have military training as a part of their required curriculum for two years. (The Board has already adopted the policy that military training is synonymous with life in the Corps of Cadets.) “Therefore, only those students CS Civic Assn. Elects Officers New officers for the 1958 term were elected by the College Sta tion Civic Association last week. Don Dale was elected president of the group; V. E. Schember, vice- president; Mrs. Chris Groneman, secretary and R. E. Callender, act ing manager. Callender will serve at the manager post until a com mittee appointed by Dale selects a new manager for 1958. The directors voted to make edu cation, recreation and the Carnegie Library items for the 1957 budget. Committee assignments will be made at the February meeting. entering A&M for the first time with freshman classification will come under this ruling. Civilian students now on the campus will not be affected by this ruling. Stu dents now on the campus who are regularly enrolled will not come under this classification regardless of whether or not they attain sophomore status. “Students wishing to transfer from other colleges or universities will be exempt from this require ment unless they enter A&M with freshman classification. The Regis- trar and Director of Admissions classifies students with less than Art Exhibition Displayed in MSC The Creative Arts Committee of the Memorial Student Center is cur rently presenting an exhibition of paintings by The Contemporary Art Group of San Antonio. The exhibition opened Jan. 17 and will be displayed in the prom enade of the Memorial Student Cen ter until Jan. 31. The 19 paintings are of various media and size and are representative works of a num ber of outstanding Texas contem porary painters. Emalita Newton Terry, Creative Arts Group instructor and advisor has just closed a one-man show of her paintings in San Angelo. The exhibition opened in the Art Build ing of San Angelo Junior College Jan. 5, 1958 with a tea. The San Angelo Art Association were hosts for the show and tea. The exhibi tion which closed on Jan. 18 con sisted of 25 paintings—oils, case ins, and watercolors. ■ ' . - ■ ■ "" . . • • ' MY CLOSEST SHAVE by Pat Flaherty 1956 Indianapolis Speedway Winner “My closest shave was at Indianapolis in 1953,” saysf Bat Flaherty, 1956 Indianapolis winner. “The track temperature that day hit 125° and the exhaust fumes hung right down on the speedway. I was going into the north turn at 130 mph when the fumes got me. I blacked out, hit the outside concrete fence, and skidded along for 120 feet. The car was demolished, my helmet was torn off, my safety belt broke —but I didn’t break a single bone 1” For YOUR Close Shove —with a razor, not a racing car — try new Colgate Instant Shave. What a way to shave! It’s the quickest, easiest way ever, no matter what razor you use. Smooth, too! Shaves your whiskers, saves your skin. A great shave buy for the tough-beard guy! Colgate Instant Shave PEANUTS /GET AWAY FP0M\ ME SNOOPY... THIS IS ANEW COM! 7 GET AWAY I SAID!YOU'VE 60T DOS HAIR ALL OVER YOU! (f,^ x ( JJHERE'S \ f THAT BALL ] ill ' l OF MINE? / A i ~ t - i , ms 0L‘ fuzzy-face TODAY? YOU LOOK KIND OF DEPRESSED.. v]( (F?r: Ibyv //_ 30 semester hours of completed credits as freshmen. Students hav ing 30 or more semester hours of completed credit are classified sophomores or higher and thus would be exempt from this require ment. “Another part of the ruling states: Tn order to remain in the Corps of Cadets a student must remain a 1.0 grade point ratio on his academic work through the previous semester/ This seems quite clear. This rule will also go into effect September 1958. It will apply to all students in the Corps of Cadets. “According to our interpretation, the Commandant will be required by this ruling to separate any stu dent from the Corps regardless of class or rank in the Corps if his accumulative academic grade point ratio drops below 1.0 at the end of any semester. Readmission to the Corps could only be granted after the student has improved his aca demic performance to the point where his over-all academic ratio at the end of a given semester is 1.0 or above and then only with the approval of the Commandant. “Students who are dropped from the Corps because of academic deficiencies will- be considered to have fulfilled the military training requirement and will not be held for courses in military science.” Library Sets Week's Schedule Cushing Library will maintain the following schedule for the be tween semester period: Saturday, Jan. 25—8 a. m. to 1 p. m.; Sunday, Jan. 26—-closed; Monday, Jan. 27 to Friday, Jan. 31—8 a. m. to 5 p. m.; Saturday, Feb. 1—8 a. m. to 12 noon and Sunday, Feb. 2—closed. On Monday the Library will re turn to its regular schedule. The A&M Consolidated School ( Board authorized action Monday night to collect all delinquent taxes, including 1957 taxes which are past due, beginning Feb. 1. Tax Assessor Collector Bill Mil ler and Superintendent Taylor Rie del were given the authority to ob tain legal aid in making collections of $65,725 receivable taxes. Tax collections for 1957 stood at $70,189 Monday. The tax office will be kept open during the noon hour for the re mainder of the month for the con venience of those unable to come during regular hours, Miller said. The tax office is located in the small wooden building north of the CHS auditorium. Also, at the Monday meeting, a ttmee-man board of equalization 275 Lions Attend District Meeting Approximately 275 District 2-S Lions Club members and wives at tended the Lion Mid-winter Con ference in the Memorial Student Center last Sunday, making it an “outstanding success”, Charlie Haas, College Station Lions Club president, said. Haas said the attendance was at least 75 above the number attend ing any past mid-winter confer ence. The conference was highlighted by the address of Dudley L. Simms, of Charleston, W. Va., first vice- president of Lions International. “Mr. Simms' speech was highly inspiring and enjoyed by everyone attending,” Haas said. Monday night at 6:30 the local Lions will honor their wives with an official “ladies night” in the MSC, Rooms 2-A, B, C and D. A smorgasbord dinner will be served, followed by the singing and com edy entertainment of Chester Ay ers, a fellow Lion from San An tonio. ARMY, WHAT IS AGGIELAND TO YOU? Aggie!and means many different things to many different people. To some it is the place they met their lifetime friends and received their formal education, to others it is the place they learned how to be a man and to get along with their fellow man. Although Aggieland may have a special meaning for each Aggie, all have memories of yelling for that Fightin’ Aggie Team as we beat T. U. or of singing The Twelfth Man when we didn’t yell loud enough. Army, when we go home after these finals let’s throw our chests out and tell the world that we are proud to be a Fightin’ Texas Aggie. Let’s keep alive the heritage left to us by our buddies we’ve honored with Silver Taps who are no longer able to share it with us. Old Army Lou ’112 By Charles M. Schulz fm U 5 P.t Ofl—All ..qM, „ Cif I bj Uftiltd Fti'ur* Sintf.c,' Im. R«q. U. V p«» Off—All riqKl* latti.id C