i 1 I., T— . .> The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas PAGE 2 Friday, February 7, 1958 CADET SLOUCH Art for Aggies' Sake BY WELTON JONES A great deal of this column’s space this year has been devoted to encouraging - existing artistic endeavors in the area and to urging and suggesting expansion of and ad ditions to these endeavors. One of the biggest obstacles confronted by any crusader on behalf of culture is a propensity by local citizens to shrug, raise their eyebrows and say “too bad but it just can’t be done.” People like Mrs. Emalita Terry, the MSC’s artist, will bear this column out here. Added to this hopelessness, of course, is the normal apathy and indifference which slaps any tiny flame of activity like a large wet blanket. But now the area is about to witness an event prepared under the above difficulties and count less others, too numerous to men tion here, which nonetheless, has survived preparation and is now ready to occur. Keference is being made to the forthcoming Aggie Player pro duction of Shakespeare’s “Mac beth”, which opens a five-night run Monday in Guion Hall. The production will be a monu ment, finally, to the efforts of a small group interested enough to shelter and nourish their parti cular flame in spite of whatever wet blankets that have been thrown. But since the proprietor of this column has the personal and vest ed interest in the play that any member of the cast should have, little more will be said about it. It does serve well as an ex ample of what can ,and should be done in the area. An incidental line in a movie of Charles Lindberg’s life expresses the sentiment nicely. Talking about the perils of hi.s pending flight to Paris alone, Lindberg (James Stewart) says “Sure it’s dangerous and I might fail, but it’s got to be tried and tried again until someone succeeds.” The present interpretation of “Macbeth” may be a dismal failure. It is in the realm of possibility. But flop or success, the important thing is that it is being tried. And a good, healthy try it is, too. MUSIC—While on the subject of Macbeth and the necessity of trying, it might be well to show one endeavor that apparently suc ceeded nicely. Allen Schrader, a first-year English instructor, examined his music backgi’ound in the U. S. Army and on the West Coast be fore accepting the job of com posing and arranging background music for Macbeth. He decided he could do the job if musicians could be found to play the score. There were those who scoffed at the very idea of music of any kind for the play, much less original compositions. And the idea of finding the minimum 10 musicians to execute the pieces was absurd. Then Thursday night in the Music Hall, The 10 were as sembled with several to spare and the score (very nicely done, inci- dentaly) was sight-read to a de gree of proficiency that seemed to please even Schrader. The musicians were from the Aggie Band, the A&M Consoli dated and Bryan High School bands and some were merely local people who liked to play their instruments. The talent was there, all that was needed was the opportunity and industriousness to assemble it. Thus Macbeth has its music. The situation would conceivably repeat itself on a more ambitious scale, if tried. And it must be tried, again and again. 'g Ji "'Job Calls DO YOU HAVE CAREER CLAUSTROPHOBIA? Scored ot being boxed info one narrow specialty? Afraid you'll be walled off from the big picture by routine humdrum? No need to be, if ' you're an engineer. Let Vought's representatives show you why there aren't any closet cases among Vought engineers. Make your appointment today for a campus interview. OUS RfEPRISINTATIVE WILL BE !N Y0L»R PLACEMENT OFFICE A . February 11-12 C U A N & eM - "— J&WJRL&mJMMr'r 4 MOGafiOGATMO • DALLAS, T £ X A S 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 neivspaper 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 College Station, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, September through May, and once a week during summer school. Faculty members of the Student Publications Board are Dr. Carroll P. Laverty, Chairman; Prof. Donald D. Burchard; Prof. Kobert M. Stevenson; and Mr. Bennie Zinn. Student members are W. T. Williams, John Avant, and Billy W. Libby. Ex- officio members are Mr. Charles A. Roeber; and Ross Strader, Secretary and Direc tor of Student Publications. Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester. $6 per school year. $6.50 per full year. Advertising rates furnished on request Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA, College Station, Texas. Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office in College Station, Texas, under the Act of Con gress of March 8, 1870. MEMBER: The Associated Press Texas Press Ass’n Associated Collegiate Press ——————— Represented nationally by National Advertising Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los An geles, and San Francisco. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use tor repubHcatiOn 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 reserved, y ' - News contributions may be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or VI 6-4910 editorial office, Room 4, YMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. or at JOE TINDEL ..Editor Jim Neighbors Managing Editor Gary Rollins ...........Sp.orts Joy Rotier — Society. Editor Gayle McNutt, Val Polk City Editors Joe Busjer, Fred Meurer News Editors Jim Carrel! - Assistant Sports Editor Robert Weekley, David Stoker, Johnny Johnson, John Warner, Ronald Easley, Lewis Reddell .........Reporters Raoul Roth ..News PhotogHphei* Francis Nivers — •. Sport Photographer Johnny Barger ......I ....CHS Corresnondent George Wise Circulation Manager “Now that you’ve solved our athletic problem, Coach Myers, I hope you settle th’ coed squabble!” Town Hall Music Charms A udience Accompanied by 74 competent musicians and a folio of light, romantic-school music, a pleasant little man with a military bearing on the podium blew in to White Coliseum last night and, while he didn’t make musical history he certainly charmed the apprecia tive audience. Victor Alessandro, who in seven years has built the San Antonio Symphony Orchestra into one of the top three and possibly the top two in Texas, chose his program well and served up a bonus of three encores after advising the crowd to “save the blisters on their hands.” The San Antonio Orchestra, though however suited it may be in a proper auditorium, was lost in the vastness of the cavern that is White Coliseum. The lack of acoustics was particulary felt dur ing the principal work of the evening, Peter Tschaikowsky’s Fifth Symphony. Tschaikowsky scored the Fifth in a range from “ppp” to “fff” in To Aggies & Faculty Flan Your Banquets NOW For Spring. Banquet Room With Reservations For 250 Or Less Call TA 2-1353 The TRIANGLE 3606 So. College Ave AIR PLANES : Everything For The Flying Model Builder For We Also Build And Fly. Featuring • OS MAX • FOX • TORPEDO » THIMBLE-DROME • RADIO CONTROL EQUIPMENT • AIR PLANE KITS FOR ANY TYPE OF FLYING Everyone Is Invited to COULTER FIELD Every Sunday For Informal Model Flying Courtesy J. D. Trissel, Mgr. John and Char lie’s Flying Models 109 E 26th TA2-4200 Bryan, Texas volume, and, although most con ductors take the flashy composer’s moderations with a grain of salt, Alessandro was forced to stay within a much closer range than usual, fearing the vibrations of a fff and the complete loss of sound at ppp. Pointing toward the San An tonio Grand Opera Festival in March, the group played a suite from Bizet’s “Carmen”, the first opera of their proposed series and added another selection during the encores. Berlioz’ “R o m a n Carnival Overture” lent itself nicely to the orchestra’s strong lower strings, and several soloists whip ped off a presentable “Afternoon of a Faun”, Debussy’s classic pastoral. Enesco’s “Roumanian Rhapsody No. I” completed the program, and, although a Mantovani-like rendition of the traditional “Londonderry Air” almost put the audience to sleep as a second encore, a freight train delivery of the “Russian Dance” from the Nutcracker Ballet by Tschaikow sky woke them up to applaud warmly. The following job interviews will be held in the Placement Office next week: Monday American Oil Company, Texas City, interviews mechanical, elec trical, industrial, chemical engi neering and chemistry majors for work with hydraulics and tech nical service. Amoco Chemicals Corporation interviews majors in chemical engineering and chemistry for work in technical sales. Celanese Corporation of Amer ica, Bishop, Tex., interviews ma jors in chemical and mechanical engineering and chemistry. Monday and Tuesday Shell Oil Company interviews majors in civil, electrical, mech anical and chemical engineering, chemistry, mathematics, geolog ical engineering and petroleum engineering. Tuesday Lone Star Gas Company inter views majors in chemical, indus trial, mechanical, and petroleum engineering and geology for jobs in production (oil and gas), transmission, and distribution, plus research and development. Petro-Tex Chemical Corpora tion interviews majors in chem ical engineering and chemistry for work in process chemical en gineering and laboratory and pi lot plant work. Tuesday and Wednesday Chance Vought Aircraft, Inc., interviews majors in aeronauti cal, civil, electrical and mechani cal engineering, mathematics and physics for work in designing military aircraft and guided mis siles. Soil Conservation Service in terviews majors in agricultural and civil engineering, soil science, range and forestry and geology. An Editorial Closed Doors Freshman Engineers To Eeleet Officers Election of officers for the Freshman Engineering Society will be held Monday night at 7:30 in the Chemistry Lecture Room. After the election of officers a film will be shown. The Student Senate closed their doors to the press last night in their discussion of the contentions to be presented to the Student Publications Board on the recom mendation that Joe Tindel be asked to resign as editor of The Battalion. This closed session of a legis lative assembly was done, under the guise of being in the best interest of the college. Yet the very issue they discus sed and the crux of their conten tions were that Tindel acted in bad faith . . . not in the best inter ests of the college. There seems to be.a parallel here: if the Senate can sit in judgment on what is best for A&M, does not the editor of The Battalion also have this privilege ? But by no stretch of the imagi nation can a secret meeting of a representative body be justified. In the first place, the Senate has no authority to sit in closed ses sion; such meetings are not spell ed out in the new, not yet ratified constitution for that body. Secondly, the issue in question is not between the members of the Senate and Joe Tindel. From the outset, they have avowed to be voicing the opinion of the entire student body. Yet tonight, that, body of students was vertually ex cluded from the discussion. Either the Senate represents the students or it doesn’t. There can be no middle ground. Thirdly, as a representative body, the Senate is obligated not only to serve the people it repre sents, but to inform them how and why they act in any session. Hanging a shroud of secrecy over the doors of any meeting leads to only one conclusion: something is trying to be hidden. But does a representative body have any authority to hide their actions from the people they represent? The injury in stifling the pro ceedings of the Senate is not to The Battalion. News for its own sake has relatively little value. The injury is to the readers of ‘The Batt’, for they are the people that were represented, not a newspaper. There is a fallacy in logic that maintains that it is better for the A people to be ignorant. *The whole* concept of democracy and the* American way of life as we know* it is based on the single premise •> that, through education, people jS will be able to choose for them- ■ selves between right and wrong. I The Senate holds that the editor I of The Battalion has too much a power; he can virtually dictate his I wishes to readers through the 1 editorial columns of his paper. Yet | again a parallel is evident: where I is the distinction between such an 1 editor (if he be just such a one) ' and a representative body which . can dictate to the group that ap pointed it, what they should and should not be told of its proceed ings ? The Senate can not be totally blamed for their action to close their meeting. The example for such censorship at the source has been handed down to them from various other groups. And every time it occurs, it is allowed to pass unnoticed. No where there seems to be anyone who desires to know what goes on behind the "shrouds of secrecy. And yet, there should be. Be cause such denial of public right * to know how their governing body is functioning is contrary to the very organization of representa tive bodies. Without a choice of representa tion, only dictatorship can result. And with dictatorship comes com plete stifling of everything that might enlighten the masses and allow them to see how the destinies of many are controlled by a few. It is unavoidable unless the people are informed. The people have a right If know. (JB) Need A Billfold, Belt, or Buckle? SEE COURT’S Shoes — Shoe Repairs North Gate DON’T MISS OUR GIGANTIC SALE NOW IN PROGRESS LEON B. WEISS Just Down From Campus Theater COMING FEBRUARY 14 Hughes announces campus interviews for Electrical Engineers a,nd Physicists receiving B.S., M.S., or Ph.D. degrees. Consult your placement office now for an appointment. HUGHES i i i i i i ._i RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND MANUFACTURING Hughes Aircraft Company • Culver City, Los Angeles, El Segundo and Fullerton, California and Tucson, Arizona are HELPING ME TO GROK) INTO A STRONG, HEALW ADULT! GIVINS LITTLE KIDS ALLOVkPTME (90RLD A BETTER (JUAY OP U?E „ t ifiuYmj.TMiPieai mmAwmmMAm!