f ER31 Thursday, September 17,1987/The Battalion/Page 3 State and Local naprafty canine entertains students with capers ism •t“d money to* i 1 • 11 is unfortui ,,o ney generan ‘ is used forfii? tke Oral Rob In* didn’t raw: Kvery timetb user Oral exit: -'ed me is the it were genet;:: tpaganda. i he good Rev 's up the Morali e the Moral iamned tohd r the half-hen Mug about y now not only pc ■ is also blaib in ministriesii ngelists have it he wordthetj nalism. Their e with sensatia iousfv iooiwji easily findooei ? life theyfaidi onalizedandft those who Its ^ udevtsiuaev® 1 hope theydffli emotional pas! felt. ienior joum- mnist for Tit 3 im Chesshir tells his dog, Beau, to play dead. Photo by Marie L. McLeod By Marie L. McLeod Reporter Entertainment at A&M doesn’t al ways occur on a stage. Many A&M students have been amused by the performances of an entertainer they’ve seen on campus who per forms many feats from catching a Frisbee to a trick called “Bang.” Sitting attentively at his “spot” in front of Nagle Hall, the entertainer awaits commands from his owner, Jim Chesshir, as many students sit anticipating his next trick. “Do you want to play Frisbee?” Chesshir says to Beau, his 4-year-old registered golden retriever. Excitedly, Beau goes to his owner, who has a Frisbee in his hand. Ches shir throws the disc and says, “Catch the Frisbee, Beau.” As many students watch in amazement, silendy cheering him on. Beau takes off, keeping a close eye on the Frisbee until he snatches it with his mouth. He then proudly carries it back to his master, sits and gives the Frisbee back. After the Frisbee is put away, Chesshir turns to Beau and says, “Bang.” Beau immediately falls down, rolls over and plays dead for onlookers. Chesshir, who earned a master’s degree in Wildlife and Fisheries Sci ences in May, says while he attended A&M, he brought Beau with him when he needed to see a professor. He says he would tell Beau to go to his spot, the left concrete banister of the stairs leading into Nagle Hall, and then would tell him to stay. Upon Chesshir’s return, usually about 20 minutes later, he would take Beau to a nearby fountain to swim, a privilege Beau enjoys, he says. There, too, he would entertain many as he followed Chesshir’s com mands. He would dive when told, catch the splash and get out upon his command, Chesshir says. Beau would not shake off the water until he saw his master do a wrenching motion with his hand, he says. “He’s got an incredible vocabula ry,” Chessir says. Beau knows many tough tricks outside of the basic ones like “sit” and “stay,” he says. Beau is able to follow hand signals as well as verbal commands. To train his dog, Chesshir says he used the book “Water Dogs,” by Richard Welters, for guidance. The training method he applied was de veloped at a Seeing-Eye-dog labo ratory, he says. Laboratory researchers identified critical periods of a dog’s mental de velopment, he says. Two periods take place during the first 49 days of a dog’s life, he says. On the 49th day, the beginning of the third critical period, it is vital to remove the puppy from its litter be cause that’s when a “pecking order” begins and personality development takes place, Chesshir says. There fore, he says, he got Beau when the puppy was 49 days old. The last two critical periods start on the seventh week and continue through the 16th week, he says. That is when the hard-core training i cakes place, he says. He says the training is like pro gramming a mind; there is a need for repetition, consistency and asso ciation. While the dog is on a leash, one- syllable commands should be used repeatedly and consistently, he says, stressing the importance of using the same word each time. Along with a verbal command, a hand signal should be used allowing the puppy to associate the two, he says. Eventually, it will respond to ei ther command, Chesshir says. Hand signals are vital to a hunting dog, since they enable the owner and dog to remain quiet in a hunting en vironment, he says. In order to learn its commands, the puppy needs to spend a lot of time with its master, Chesshir says. He says he felt fortunate because when he first got Beau, he was doing field work as an environmental tech nician and was able to bring Beau with him. That allowed them a lot of dme together, he says. “It is important to work with the puppy on a daily basis,” he says. “I try to take him everywhere I go.” He says he takes Beau running with him freauendy. But unlike most dogs. Beau doesn’t need to be on a leash beacause he stays close by Chesshir’s side. The only drawback to taking Beau, Chesshir says, is that he knows when they are on the final stretch of the course and sprints it — leaving his master in the dust. Beau, described by his owner as “a friendly dog and fellow Aggie,” has spent a lot of time on campus enter taining students and making friends. Beau is defintely an Aggie — he wears a Texas A&M collar bought for him by Chesshir’s wife. La Dean, Class of ’86, and he even has met Re veille. When Chesshir says, “If you’re an Aggie, bark,” Beau sits up proudly and barks. Court rules cigarette maker must disclose ingredients AUSTIN (AP) — The makers of Lucky Strike cigarettes must disclose their secret ingredients to a woman who claimed 36 years of smoking “Luckies” killed her husband, the Texas Supreme Court ruled Wednesday. The court rejected American To bacco Co.’s request to overturn Aus tin State District Judge Peter Lowry’s January order forcing the company to release the ingredient list sought by Nadia Leanora Dyer. The Austin woman has sued American Tobacco in jcpnnection with the lung-cancer death of her husband Gerald Wayne Dyer, who was 62 when he died last year. Lowry’s order says that only Mrs. Dyer’s attorney and expert witnesses can see the ingredients. American Tobacco argued that even that limited disclosure amounts to a “drastic ruling.” According to court records, the company did not want to list the ingredients as any thing more specific than “flue-cured tobacco, air-cured tobacco, oriental tobacco, humectants, proprietary flavoring and paper wrappings.” that when Irs did, too.Bui3 nillions withr-; cary, butthinij iva/kingaw enough toh.\ Find Out Why These 1986 - 87 Aggie Graduates Elected to Pursue a Career with Arthur Andersen & Co. instances DALLAS Cynthia Webb Sandra Goeking Jacqueline Sentmanat OTHER Kristy Barnett Laura Battle Sarah White Deborah Haass Maria Skala Paul Carroll Kristina Zinke Elizabeth Hardin Julie Stremmel Kathryn Cedeno Gregory Dennis HOUSTON Dwayne Hart Sandra Tanner James Cummins Douglas Fiest Naomi Hewitt Beth Thompson Diann Eggleston J. Robert Foote Julie Adams Liz Hill Scott Vonderheide Nicola Fuentes Amir Friedman Scott Bryant Beth Janssen Buff Weathersby Harry Garwood Jeffrey Gilliam Vincent Burkett Carol Junek Patricia Weber Sherry Kavalew Rebecca Lawrence Scott Cloud Karla Kroiss Fritz Weiss Michael Parkman W. David Lee Nancy Coleman Maria Melgosa John West Wayne Roberts Lisa Leonard Peter Czerniakowski Jennifer Monroe Leslie Whitmeyer David Sharp Troy McDougald William Despain Peggy Restivo Ronald Wood Everette Tower Richard Moore Shawn Drummond Rebecca Riegel Joan Woodward Terri Remmert Lanny Shope Brian Elliott Barry Garrett Steven Savitz Peter Schmaltz Nadine Zeigar D D 0 0 D D To find out about our Management Information Consulting Practice, attend a PRESENTATION & RECEPTION Tuesday September 22,1987 College Station Hilton Bluebonnet Room 6:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Casual attire - refreshments provided All Masters candidates in business and computer science as well as senior undergraduates in engineering, accounting, finance, computer science and BAIMA are invited. We will be interviewing on campus for Audit, Tax & Consulting positions October 28-30. Arthur Andersen