Page 2 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Wednesday, February 14, 1968 CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle “Since this is a letter you’re writing- to a box holder at TWU, I’d suggest that you leave this part out about how much you love her since you don’t even know her yet!” Tight F orecast Interest For ’68’ Although it’s known as lettuce, bread, dough, cabbage, moolah, long green, beans, chips and berries, you can’t bake it, fry it, or eat it. Of course it’s money, and it’s never been found in the frozen foods section, or with the potato chips, or even with the detergents. And yet money is an item similar to any marketable products, and its value and price varies from day to day and month to month. A high-pressure system of inflation which has met a stationery front of refusal to increase taxes has created gray clouds of tighter money credit over the United States. Production continues to grow at record levels. Wages are at the highest point in history and prices are following quickly behind. People are buying more luxuries, and enjoying more expensive housing, clothing and foods. And with record high interest rates paid on savings, people are also saving more of their disposable income than ever before. President Johnson asked for a 10 per cent tax sur charge hoping that the spiral of increased spending and higher prices could be curbed. But thus far the House Ways and Means Committee under Democratic Chairman Wilbur Mills of Arkansas has blocked the tax proposal to the delight of most Americans. Additional income tax might seem overburdening to most individuals, but the cost of maintaining government “by the people and for the people” is increasing. Additional revenue is needed and the inflation of a booming economy needs some limiting. It is an election year and although congressmen may realize that a tax increase is essential to the stability of the economy and the future well being of each individual, few will act for fear of retribution through the ballot. It is the sham of ignorance and the idiosyncracy of an entire nation which prides itself on elective government yet creates an atmosphere where politicians remember that they’re politicians instead of qualified representatives do ing what is needed. The result is that the false sense of security in a boom ing economy may soon fade into the realities of depression. Federal Reserve Board managers are preparing to further tighten credit. In the past that has meant empty pockets for the housing industry, and at a time when in creasing population and urbanization would indicate just the opposite. Tight credit means that when you want to borrow money for a car, emergency or home improvements, you’ll pay more interest, and 7 to 8 per cent doesn’t seem un likely in the near future. There is a problem of facing the lesser of two evils, taxes or inflation. Save your dimes and pencils for hard times ahead. FINAL MAKE - UP Pictures For 1968 Aggieland All Seniors and Graduate Students Thru Feb. 17. University Studio MARCH 5 DEADLINE FOR ALL GROUP PICTURES FOR 1968 AGGIELAND John Fuller A Roar For ‘Greasepaint’ There are several conditions that a play review absolutely must meet. First, the reviewer has to get to the theater in time to find out if understudies are filling in for any of the actors he’s about to criticize by name; that’s only fair. Second, he’s got to know a little background of the play, so he doesn’t waste time trying to figure out what’s going on; in the case of a road-show version of a Broadway play, he has no business writing- about it unless he’s seen the original, and he has no right to criticize the playwright because that has been done years earlier by better men. This, on the other hand, is a column about “The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell of the Crowd,” presented in Bryan last night jointly by the Rotary Series and Town Hall. So much for the conditions, none of which we can meet. “GREASEPAINT” is set, we are told in the program, in “A rocky place.” Period. The props are basic: three huge stone slabs, INTERVIEW (Continued From Page 1) pated total enrollment of i 20,000 expected by 1976, what additional housing will be avail able for students ? RUDDER: New dormitories will definitely have to be built for some of the students. However, off-campus housing, both in Col lege Station and Bryan, will also weigh heavily on the situation. BATTALION: The 1976 projec tion includes 6,000 graduate stu dents, almost three times as many as currently on campus. What fields of graduate study will pre dominate ? RUDDER: Agriculture, engineer ing and the sciences will head the list, because we’re naturally stronger in those fields. However, I do foresee great improvements and increases in graduate studies in the humanities. BATTALION: What new gradu ate programs will be added ? RUDDER: Aerospace engineer ing, for one. We’ll also ask for new master’s and doctorate pro grams in the humanities. Where there is a need and demand for new programs, we’ll add them. BATTALION: From an $18 mil lion research figure now, an in crease to $50 million is expected by 1976. How will these funds be distributed ? RUDDER: I think it will be com pletely across the board, dis tributed to all the fields where it’s needed. BATTALION: When is the De partment of Business Administra tion expected to become a sepa rate College ? RUDDER: The Coordinating Board has approved the establish ment of this College. It will be taken before the Board of Direc tors this month at their regular meeting. BATTALION: Are additional hikes in registration fees and board fees foreseeable in the future? RUDDER: Tuition is regulated by the state legislature. Board fees are expected to rise, how ever, due to the Fair Labor Law, which has caused the labor cost to rise. The cost of living, which includes food, has been going up every year. We can’t be excepted from the national economic con ditions. BATTALION: Do you plan to retire any time soon ? RUDDER: I have no personal plans to retire. I serve at the pleasure of the Board of Direc tors. ALL JUNIORS and ALL SOPHOMORES Pictures for 1968 Aggieland A - D Feb. 19-24 E - J Feb. 26 - Mar. 2 K - N Mar. 4-9 O - S Mar. 11-16 T - Z Mar. 18-23 UNIVERSITY STUDIO THE BATTALION Opinions expressed in The Battalion SSS&riSSa VS “* £ af'e those of the student WVlteVS only. The otherwise credited in the paper and local news of spontaneous Battalion is a non tax-supported non- ^?L n r P he b ^n ed ar h e er a1s n o reJer^V' republication of aI1 other profit, self-supporting educational enter- Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. pnse edited and operated by students as News contributions may be made by telephoning 846-6618 a university and community newspaper. yor 8 ^ 4 e^\lsin g :lt or th d e env^ ri c1n 4 ’ YMCA Building - Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim Mail subscriptions are $3.50 per semester; $6 per school Lindsey, chairman ; Dr. David Bowers, College of Liberal year; $6.50 per full year. All subscriptions subject to 2% Arts; F. S. White, College of Engineering; Dr. Robert S. sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request. Address: Titus, College of Veterinary Medicine; and Hal Taylor, Col- The Battalion, Room 4, YMCA Building, College Station, Texas lege of Agriculture. T7843. The Battalion, a student newspaper at Texas A&M i. EDITOR CHARLES ROWTON KSSK'J? Mana^n* Editor'::::::::::::::::::: j<*np u n.r May, and once a week during summer school. News Editor John McCarroll Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising TMD-ovn,'a^lrv,nict T?^ Services, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Editorial Columnist Robert Solovey Francisco. Features Editor Mike Flake Staff Writers Bob Palmer, John Platzer, MEMBER Mike Wright The Associated Press, Texas Press Association Photographers Russell Autry, Mike Wright a few ladder-like structures and a backdrop dominated by an over sized disc which becomes sun or moon or fades into nothing, de pending on the scene. “Sir,” a rotund, somewhat pompous, Chuz- zlewit-style vagrant, is directing “Cocky,” the Schnook’s Schnook, in playing “The Game” on the center slab, which looks like a cross between a Monopoly board and an Aztec calendar. A group of “urchins” fill in the back ground and double as the chorus. “The Game” is the play’s ve hicle. Cocky can’t win for losing, schnook that he is, because the tyrannical Sir changes the rules and blows the whistle at will. Cocky’s ludicrous position grows poignant and even tragic when “The Girl” is suddenly introduced into the game, immediately be coming his Love Interest, and is then brutally snatched from Cocky in a typical cruel power play. After a series of similar dirty deals, Cocky’s tongue - in - cheek submissiveness gives way to de fiance. He revolts, changes posi tions with Sir, and then decides “The Game” must go on anyway because “now, at last, I see a chance of winning.” IF THIS doesn’t sound like much of a plot—well, you just had to be there. This is a symbolic, surrealistic play, at times border ing on theater-of-the-absurd, and aside from their effect on charac ter development, the events serve mainly to change the mood so that all the songs can fit in with out sounding alike. (A lot of them do, anyway, but that’s an other subject.) Like all symbolic, “message” plays, this one is thought-pro voking. If playwrights Leslie Bri- cusse and Anthony Newley were fanatical, doctrinaire communists, then Sir would be seen to repre sent the stereotyped Capitalist Pig, Cocky would be the Down trodden Laborer, the cataclysmic overthrow would be Glorious Rev olution and the denouement would constitute the dialectical Synthe sis. In suggesting what they really symbolize, those Broadway re viewers (who can comment with straight faces on man’s inhuman ity to man) had a big advantage over Batt columnists. Suffice to say that the Aggies in the aud ience didn’t have any trouble identifying with Cocky. Edward Earle was outstanding in that part, getting the audience first to laugh at him, then with him—and, intermittently, to cry with him. H i s songs, notably “Who Can I Turn To,” we’re flawless, and especially outstand ing because they lost nothing in the translation to cavernous Bry an Civic Auditorium as most of the others did. David C. Jones’ Sir was domineering without being sadistic, but seemed to lack the gusto it would certainly have had on Broadway. BUT THAT was one of the few reminders that this was not a Broadway production. The orches tra, lighting - , scenery and cos tumes all exuded as much class as anything else the auditorium has seen. It must be duly noted that several of the funniest lines and even gestures were just down right GROSS (prompting us to wonder what the play must have been like before it was toned down for the hinterlands), and gave a few ladies’ sewing circles enough fodder for hours of shocked rehashing. Nevertheless, the Rotary Series and Town Hall are to be thanked for bringing this sort of thing to Bryan-College Station. Coming as it did in the middle of a typically dull school week, “Greasepaint” was a welcome brig-ht spot for those students who took advan tage of the opportunity. It was almost worth missing that basketball game. To avoid detection, spider crabs pile seaweed and small sea creat ures on their backs. Varsity Town Suits at Stnrnce ^ ^ mcnij wear The LAND IS AT aggieland flower and gift shoppe North Gate AUDITIONS 7 p. m. Monday, Feb. 19 COFFEE LOFT For anyone interested in doing any kind of performance or program on Friday or Saturday nights this semester. QUEEN STARTS today Liz Taylor & Richard Burton In “THE COMEDIANS CIRCLE TONIGHT AT 6:30 P.M. Frank Sinatra “NAKED RUNNER Plus Rod Taylor In “HOTEL” . 'miowtN uwmqxiAus IRU STARTING THURSDAY Diane McBain In “MARY JANE” Plus “IT’S A BIKINI WORLD” CAMPUS STARTS TODAY Astronomers, salesmen, designers. programmers,chemists, psychologists, writers, sociologists, economists, metallurgists, artists, accountants,physicists, mathematicians, etc, etc, etc. That’s what General Electric is made of. General Electric is made up of a lot more than just engineers — because it takes a lot more than engi neers to tackle the problems we deal with. Like helping to unsnarl traffic jams in our cities, fight ing air pollution or finding new ways to provide power for underdeveloped nations. It takes sociol ogists, meteorologists, astronomers, writers —in fact, it takes people with just about every kind of training. But, more than any of this, it takes people with nerve, gumption, intellectual curiosity — people who care about what happens to the world. So it’s not only your major we’re interested in. It’s you. Why not see our interviewer when he comes to campus and find out whether you’re the kind of person General Electric is made of. GENERAL^ ELECTRIC An equal opportunity employer PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz Wedne! a: Q I WAS calls s armed placing at the up in h Cone repea te to a re aging 1 what r rying : For for ole they n ents w here i the dra Who many < is beini these a The A Select!’ Washii of Def Q- ed now A. 20 and average Q. ground A. ment v If a ms ily rel childrei ment v their f is freqi on gro Q. for stu A. ' one “si time c high sc learnin gradua ever is the def studenl his st drops c whiche mitted ate stu veterin optome jects n of the ' terest i tor of advice Counci Pu AS D. to Rh comp Texa: Thi won place orial ment Sei san sor, ; nomii three a fie Norr MSC who a jui Th will mori p.m. T1 will on You the p.m. “Tl