The Battdlion College Station (Brazos County)\ Texas PAGE 2 Tuesday, April 29, 1958 An Editorial Why Not a Leash? Last night the question of a leash Jaw for dogs was brought before the College Station City Council. Although the councilmen considered the question briefly, no move was taken to imply that such a law might possibly be passed. Dogs have been renounced as “man’s best friend” and no doubt in many cases this is true. But recently in Dallas one of “man’s best friends” ripped a young child’s face to shreads in spite of the baby’s father’s efforts to puli'the dog away. This was a rare case and fortunately not too many such instances occur. But to a father or mother, are all the dogs in the world worth the maiming or death of their child ? And of course, no sensible person is going to say that all dogs should be destroyed to free the world from such happenings. Dogs can be and for the most part are gentle and domestic pets and truly a friend. But roaming the streets, even the most docile canine can contract rabies and become a crazed killer. A leash law would surely cause little ill will among the community. Especially since most dog owners keep their pets penned or on a leash anyway. But a glance around the city any day will show that this is not entirely true. College Station has been lucky thus far. No serious at tacks by dogs have occurred. This may not be the case for ever. Now is the time to do something about the free-roam ing dog problem. The lives of children are not worth risking needlessly, no matter how small the risk. Call your councilman and give him your views on the subject. A leash law will be insurance for some child’s future. Let’s keep dog “man’s best friend” in College Station—at the end of a leash.—GM Dave Fitch, School of Business Administation, was named presi dent of the College Station Lions Club by acclamation yesterday as the Lions elected officei’s for 1958- 59. Archie Flowers, Don Hood and Charlie Wootan were voted 1st, 2nd and 3rd vice-president respectively. Johnny Watkins was named secre tary-treasurer with William R. Miller his assistant. Directors of the club, elected for a two-year term were George Hu- ebner and Frank Barnard. Chaidie Haas, current president, will turn over his gavel to Fitch July 1, and the new slate of offi cers will assume their posts. Otlter business conducted at the meeting included the report that the club had donated $150 from their projects fund to the Brazos County Crippled Children’s Clinic. Ed Svendsen was given the Lion Tamer Title and Mac Prescott named assistant Lion Tamer. Red Cashion was chosen tail twister and Freddie Walters was made his assistant. 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 College Sta tion, Texas, daily except Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, and holiday periods, Septem ber through May, and once a week during summer school. ire officio members are Mr. Charles A. Roeber; and W. E. Kidd, Secretary and Director of Student Publications. 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 for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in the paper and spontaneous origin published herein, in are also reserved. credited in the paper and local news of Rights of republication of all other matter here- Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester,$6 per school Advertising rat lege Station, T‘ per school year, $6.50 per full year, at efsurnished on request. Address: The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA, Col- News contributions editorial office. Room 4, Y -*■ ay be made by telephoning VI 6-6618 or' VI 6-4910 fMCA. For advertising or delivery call VI 6-6415. or at the JOE TINDEL Editor Jim Neighbors , Managing Editor Gary Rollins Sports Editor Joy Roper Society Editor Gayle McNutt City Editor Joe Buser, Fred Meurer News Editors Robert Weekley Assistant Sports Editor m-mm - •' v. f \ :: ,• —.- "X “Now, now, Fish Jethro! Let’s be more patient with upperclassmen!” Man to Man By JOE TINDEL As I type out these last lines of the year, I can’t help looking back to other columns and the events which have occupied the pages of The Battalion during this year. It’s been a great year really. Despite the fact that tempers flared from time to time, Aggies started thinking about what they wanted in the future for their school. They took much more interest in campus affairs. ★ ★ ★ First, it was the honor code squabble. Now we are well on the way to having two honor codes or maybe one for the entire student body rather than one for the Corps alone. Second, the compulsory Corps controversy arose. The board had ruled on the issue but there were forebodings on its effect on enrollment. There were words exchanged back dnd forth, but such controversy is good if it stimulates thought. Third and probably greatest, was the controversy over co-education. Some wanted it and some didn’t but the court in Bryan made up our minds for us. Time will tell its effect on A&M. During this time we hired a football coach and one left. The single wing replaced the split-T and John Crow walked off with nearly all the football honors in the nation. Charley Krueger didn’t do bad either. Nor did any other member of the Aggie team. We got to see the first year of basketball under Coach Bobby Rogers and he showed us quite a season. Besides being without a coach we had been without a vice president for some time. We got one in February—Earl Rudder, former student, war hero and politician. He’s per forming his duties well now. It’s been a big year and only the future can tell how profitable a year it has been for A&M. ★ ★ ★ As I write the last 30 on “Man to Man” some hardwork ing Battalion staffers are readying themselves to fill the “old heads’ ” shoes. If they get your cooperation, next year will be a good year or maybe even better than ever. Good luck and we’ll see you around the campus. Local Lions Club Elects President AUSTIN, Tex.—If you drive a cai% 1958 will be a good year to pay closer-than-ever attention to how you drive it. Under Gov. Price Daniel’s “Texas plan” to reduce highway tragedies, the spotlight will be on individual driving practices as never before. Speeders and drunken drivers will be prime targets. Governor Daniel is heading a drive to mobilize all the state’s resources to combat “the threat of public disaster. Annual loss of life, health and property in traffic accidents,” he said, “is greater than the loss sustained in all our natural disasters com bined.” Five-point “Texas plan” in volves (1) cooperation between all safety and enforcement officials, (2) formation of local traffic safety councils, (3) public edu cation to the problem, (4) road improvements at hazardous spots and (5) more rigid enforcement and certainty of punishment for violations, especially drunken driving and speeding. Last year 2,539 persons were killed in traffic and 122,000 were injured. Even so, 1957 ratio of fatalities to miles traveled was down—from 6.5 deaths per 100 million miles in 1956 to 6 deaths per 100 million miles in 1957. Department of Public Safety Director. Homer Garrison Jr. at tributes the reduced rate to lower average speed. Texans saved 111 lives, he said, by slowing down average speed by 1.6 miles per hour. St/ hfe/vf Sb+tforcL Goal for 1958 is more ambitious —to save 254 lives or one for each Texas county. It’s up to every Texan, said the governor, to “accept traffic safety as a do-it-yourself pro ject.” TOWARD SAFER ROADS— An important aim of the anti-ac cident campaign is a $43,000,000 program to rebuild some hazardous spots in the highway system. Governor Daniel and State Highway Engineer DeWitt Greer formally launched this work by placing a .“drive carefully” sign by a narrow bridge on a farm road near Austin. Scene of pre vious accidents, the bridge is to be widened. MONEY HUNT—Gloomy pre dictions abound as government and industry leaders look toward the state’s 1959 financing prob lems. A “conservative estimate” by Sen. William S. Fly, chairman of the Texas State Tax Study Com mission, is that $45,000,000 per year in new revenue will be need ed just to maintain present state services. TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY the enemy Intho wondorof Stereophonlc'Sound CIRCLE TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY “Man From God’s Country” With George Montgomery Plus brhzv, m FUN- jy FULBD ^ COMEDY! AVA GARDNER STEWART % GRANGER x DAVID NIVEN COLOR, > ■ ••C;;W. 'Vv-T?/ LAST DAY V/ltO apouf LOV f £ QgAtYabouf Aflte/£ / Summer Tjtfve mM • •. . • v JOHN JUDY JOHN SAXON • MEREDITH • WILDER . A UNIVERSAUNrERNAriONAl PICTURE . Melodies of Wind Quintet Pleasing to Series Audience By WELTON JONES A touch of the intricate melodies and countermelodies that make up chamber music dif fused themselves in the Memorial Student Center last night as one of the better touring wind quintets provided by the MSG Re cital Series this year performed. Although Series Chairman Jim Jones and MSG Director Wayne Stark spoke briefly before the performance about the need of student interest and assistance if the programs are to continue, neither performers nor audience lacked enthusiasm. Included in the program were two pieces in the traditional chamber music style, a Quintet by Franz Danzi and a Mozart Divertimento, originally written for two basset horns and a bas soon and performed by Charles Russo on clarinet, Melvin Kaplan on Oboe and Bassoonist Morris Newman. The pieces, both written at the end on the 18th century, illu strated the fragile beauty and intricateness inherent in small ensemble works. In a more energetic mood, the quintet executed the boisterous, gambling “Kleine Kammer- musik, No. 2” by Yale Univer sity’s Paul Hindesmith. The num ber is a personal favorite of this particular group and they barked it out with a will, seeming at times almost to be caricaturing a wind quintet. The other two numbers on the ywiVAb”" i M 'iM’J W l.’.VI M/S IRfl TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY T Was A Teenage Werewolf” With Michael Landon Plus “Invasion Of The Saucer Men” With Steve Terrell! PALACE Brion Z-SSn STARTING TUESDAY CMAsm AND HilSOCOlOR M-G-M presents Glenn FORD -'//Shirley MacLAINEl B THC/CALLED HIM * STRANGER WITH A GUN.. LESUC ,NIELSEN l .. 'Sy. 'S, V//. % '' ' MICKEY, \ U'',Z SHAU6HNFSSY L EDGAR BUCHANAN QUEEN LAST DAY The Tarnished Angels program were selections from Ravel’s “Mother Goose Suite” ar ranged by Kaplan and “A Wood land Serenade” by Herbert Haufrecht. The first reminded many of Allen Schrader’s music written for the Aggie Players’ “Macbeth” this year and the se cond was a sprightly, syncopated romp that belied the title. On Campos with MaxShuIman (By the Author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys! “and, “Barefoot Boy with Cheek”) SWEENEY IN THE TREES Spring is here—the season of tree-sitting contests. This I ap plaud. Tree-sitting is healthful and jolly and as American as apple pie. Also it keeps you off the streets. Tree-sitting is not, however, without its hazards. Take, for example, the dread and chilling case of Manuel Sigafoos and Ed Sweeney, both sophomores at the Nashville College of Folk Music and Woodworking, and both madly in love with a beau tiful alto named Ursula Thing, who won their hearts singing that fine old folk song, I Strangled My True Love with Her Own Yellow Braids, and I’ll Never Eat Her Sorghum Any More. Both Manuel and Ed pressed Ursula to go steady, but she could not choose between them, and finally it was decided that the boys would have a tree-sitting contest, and Ursula would belong to the victor. So Manuel and Ed clambered up adjoin ing aspens, taking with them the following necessaries: food, clothing, bedding, reading matter, and—most essential of all- plenty of Marlboro Cigarettes. We who live on the ground know how much you get to like with a Marlboro. Think how much more important they must be to the lonely tree-dweller—how much more welcome their fine, mild tobacco; how much more gratifying their free-drawing filters; how much more comforting their sturdy, crush proof flip-top box. Climb a tree and see for yourselves. tree SITTING CONTESTr Well supplied with Marlboros, our heroes began their tree sitting contest—Manuel with good heart, Ed with evil cunning. The shocking fact is that crafty Ed, all unbeknownst to Manuel, was one of three identical triplets. Each night while Manuel dozed on his bough, one of Ed’s brothers—Fred or Jed—would sneak up the tree and replace him. “How can I lose?” said Ed with a fiendish giggle to his brother Fred or Jed. But Ed had a big surprise coming. For Manuel, though he did not know it himself, was a druid! He had been abandoned as an infant at the hut of a poor and humble woodcutter named Cornelius Whitney Sigafoos III, who had raised the child as his own. So when Manuel got into the tree, he found much to his surprise that he had never in all his life felt so at home and happy. He had absolutely no intention of ever leaving. After seven or eight years Ed and his brothers wearied of the contest and conceded. Ursula Thing came to Manuel’s tree and cried, “I am yours! Come down and pin me.’! But Manuel declined. Instead he asked Ursula to join him in the tree. This she could not do, being subject to mopery (a morbid allergy to woodpeckers), so she ended up with Ed after all. Only she made a mistake—a very natural mistake. It was Jed, not Ed, with whom she ended up. Ed, heartbroken at being tricked by his own brother, took up metallurgy to forget. Crime does not pay.' ® 1958 Mai Shulman This column is brought to you by the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes who suggest that if you are ever up a tree when trying to find a gift, give Marlboros. You can’t miss! LFL ABNER By A1 Capp ^MERE'S YOUR BREAKFAST BASSETT!? I'M SORRY I KEPT YOU WAITING — I'M MALF- SOMEBODY DEAD,BUT/ HERE IS YOU'RE /TALKIN'TOTH' SORRY. \ CRIM'NULS/? WELLJHAT MAKES IT OKAY f? IT'S EITHER TH' BELOVED POLICE CHIEF, TH' FINE OLE MAYOR,OR HIS INNOCENT .YOUNG DOTTER!! BUT WHICH ONE O'THEM BIRDS IS ITP ^ m CAINT BETH'POLICE CHIEF-ALL POLICEMEN IS HONEST!!-CAI N'T BE VO; MAYOR—YO' ISTOO FINE-TOO OLE!?- fAc SUM!!—AH'D LIKE TO MEET YORE INNERCENT YOUNG DOTTER!! )Tm. Reg. U. S. Pet Off.—All rights rotervec Copr. [95$ bv United Feature S^ndicefe^JneJ U’L ABNER By Al Capp OH, V/HUT A SWEET INNERCENT CHILE!/ 4-29 BUT FRANKLY, YO'IS UNDER SUSPICION I! -SO, WHILE TH' POLICE IS OUT, TRYIN' TH' LATEST PLAN TO KETCH TH'CRIM'NULS TONIGHT— YO'GOTTA STAY IN TH' HOUSE WIF YORE DADDY AN'ME!/ CRAZY MAN!?—DADDY-O HITS THE FEATHERS EARLY, BUT I SWING TILL TWELVE!.' SEE YOU LATER, INVESTI GATOR ff