This week saw confronta- tion politics hit the streets of Memphis. See page 2 for a first hand report by Debbie Sale.

Nov. 14, 1969 Southwestern At Memphis Vol. 51, No. 10

'ks>; ;W.Q:F.: saeory;'s z..,.;:: :: , ::.>'i:; ,...,:ao, ,....;:::g Visitation Vetoed SGA. Vote Negates Senate Format; Both Townsend and Voorhies dorms met sep- arately Monday night to Referendum Proposes Alternative vote on whether or not parietals in each of the By Margie Howe get Committee, Secretariate, the responsibilities which the need for anybody's voice to be two dorms should become and an Information Committee. on this campus. The Senate and the Executive Publicity Coordinator previous- represented permanent. Council met in a closed joint The Executive Council will be ly held. This committee will Anybody at any time can make Townsend defeated the session, Sunday, Nov. 9, and retained as before, composed of collect, coordinate, and publish public position statements via proposal: 22 against, 40 in officers, commissioners, MUB, I voted unanimously to abolish information pertinent to campus the mimeograph, Univers ity favor, with 2 abstaining the Senate as it now exists. WUB, IFC, PAN, Fine Arts and 5 unable to be con- life. This includes posters, news- Forum, or Sou'wester. Anybody This proposal will be brought Council, Experimental College, tacted. The vote in Voor- Academic Affairs, and a repre- letters, leaflets, positions and can speak directly to any one before the community as a ref- hies was so close it was sentative from the Student Cen- opportunities available to stu- of the school's deans and ex- erendum Thursday, November sent before the Social Reg- ter Administrative Board. Rep- 20. Open discussion of the pro- dents, and descriptions of pro- pect immediate, honest re- ulations Council to decide. resentatives from the posed changes will be held Tues- Honor grams undertaken by various sponses. Every person on this A 3/4 affirmative vote Council, Social Nov. 18, at 8 p.m. in Regulations from the total member- day, commissions. campus is capable of represent- Frazier Jelke B. Council, and other student gov- ship of each dorm was re- ernment organizations will be Secretariate will be composed ing himself at any time and is quired for the parietal's THE STRUCTURE which will considered for membership. of the secretary of the SGA, the urged to do so. proposal to pass. fill the void will be composed The Executive four class secretaries, and a "As for the budget, the newly of the Executive Council, a Bud- Council will work under an expanded Execu- secretary from each commis- created Budget Committee is tive Code which will possibly sion. The Secretariate will keep established to deal extensively have vetoing powers over the records, minutes, correspond- and in depth with the SGA bud- Sonorous Melodies For Charity Budget Committee. Mike Pat- ence, and type, mimeograph, get. It will know immediately ton, president of the Student and publ i sh all information how much money is where, why Government Association, added Ring With Kappa Delta All-Sing which the Information Commit- it is being spent and on what. that "'Referendum, recall, veto, tee feels is necessary. and impeachment procedures The ignorance that plagued the By Nancy Hottel ensembles each perform for ten Senate and resulted in often will all have to be written into AS PATTON SAID, "'We're minutes and are judged for ap- irresponsible manipulation of the new constitution changing the 'student govern- Kappa Delta sorority will pearance and presentation, dic- since the funds is over. old one will be obsolete with ment; in other words, slicing sponsor Southwestern's annual tion, intonation, balance, and the referendum." off the Senate structure, be- "OF COURSE, all this ,as- Treadwell of songs selected. All-Sing tonight at caliber cause it was superfluous and sumes a lot of responsibility on MOST IMPORTANT of the High School. The program, a Judges are Mrs. J. M. West- because it never worked in the the part of the students. Hope- new committees created is the benefit show for the Crippled burry, a former music teacher six years -of its existence. It was fully, everyone will see this as Budget Committee. Composed Children's Hospital in Rich- at Central High School; Miss an artificial creation serving no a positive move, opening up the of the SGA treasurer, Nancy Walker, a pop singer in four class discernible student need. Ori- field of decision making and in- mond, Va., begins at 7:30. presidents, and graduate school music at Mem- four other ginally, it was intended to 'serve volvement to anyone interested. elected members, Admission is 50c for students phis State.,; apd Mr. and Mrs. the commit- as a forum at which the student The questions involved are ones tee rWill fKhafidle" all fuinds' allo- and 75c for adults. Tickets will John Hollidan. Mr. Hollidan is voice could be exercised and to. of efficiency and directness, and cated be on sale at the door. Proceeds with a Memphis television sta- for student activities. This handle the financial workings of of creating a structure sensitive committee will review go to the Crippled Children's tion, and Mrs. Hollidan is a and dis- student government. to human needs and energy." seminate all SGA funds and will Hospital in Richmond, Va. former Metropolitan opera sing- Patton seems to feel that the research proposed budgets. As "The psuedo-issue of repre- er. referendum will pass. A refer- THE KD's will start the show Patton emphasized, "The Bud- sentation of course found its former of endum needs -a 3/4 majority of with "It's a Grand Night for get Committee will review all well-spring in the those voting to pass. Singing." They do not compete. Moratorium Activities funds and put them where they these two purposes. There's no can be used more effectively." The SAE's, who won first In Deference Each commissioner will still place in the men's division last Quelled have a contingency year, have not yet submitted fund, but To Local Strike Issue will have to petition for any Coop's Original Opening Postponed their selections; but the Inde- major expenditures. are defending Senate-ap- pendent Women By Bob Tigert pointed members for the interim their last year's first prize with Pending Record Hassle's Resolution period are: Gary Good m.a n, a medley of songs from South On Oct. 15, 1969, two thousand Chip Hury, Pacific, including "Bali Hai," antiwar protestors m a r c h e d 'Tom Marshall, and By Kathy Jorgensen THE COOP will not be able from the Spanish War Memorial Greg Meeks. to isell records until final con- "Younger Than Springtime," The newly formed student Wash That Man Park to Overton Park to show firmation by New York law "I'm Gonna The Information Committee, COOP is tentatively scheduled Outa My Hair," and their disfavor against the Viet- firms reviewing the contracts Right composed of the Publicity Co- to open within the next four "." nam conflict; on Nov. 15, 1969, is received. Although the rest Washington, D.C. will host half ordinator of the Publications weeks. The opening, originally of the COOP's inventory is com- SECOND PLACE winner SN a million to a million people Board, James Dobbins, pub- planned for Nov. 1, has been plete, the opening is being held from Hair- delayed because contract agree- is singing songs who plan to demonstrate their licity coordinators of each com- off until the record orders can "Good Morning Starshine" and resentment towards the deaths ments with various record com- and delivered to mission, and any other inter- be confirmed "Aquarius/Let the Sun Shine;" of 40,000 American soldiers. panies have not yet been con- Southwestern. and the freshmen women have As for Memphis itself, little ested students, will take over firmed. COOP has now received a chosen "Step to the Rear" and has been planned. In fact, when charter from the state of Ten- a medley from Oliver! the National Moratorium Com- nessee as a non-profit organiza- mittee sent hundreds of buttons, the Southwest- Other groups entering in- tion. Officially posters, and stickers, which ar- Student Cooperative, Inc., clude: DDD--"April Come She ern rived C.O.D., the Memphis co- corporation's purpose is to Will" and "Georgy Girl;" AOPi the ordinators, lacking funds, had purchase and sell goods, to - Israeli folk songs; Chi O - to send them back. prices and pa- medley from Annie Get Your offer reduced tronage refunds to members, Gun; KS-Children's edle y; When questioned about the and to "engage in any other ac- KA - a medley composed of Memphis situation, Clark Wil- tivities which may enrich the "Colors," "You've Got to Hide liams replied that the Morator- social, educational, or cultural Your Love Away," "Let It Be ium had been called off in Mem- life of the students and faculty Me," and "Your Heart;" ZTA- phis for November in deference at Southwestern." "," "Look to the to the 'School Board/St. Joseph Rainbow," and "Windmills of situation. He remarked that the ALTHOUGH an experimental Your Mind;" ATO-"Summer- marchers would hate to split up theatre and an informal faculty time" and "O Happy Day;" the protest movement especial- discussion room are planned, PiKA-"I Will" and "I Think ly if it were to detract from the present lack of space will con- It's Gonna Rain Today." passion of the black protest. fine the COOP to one sales- THE TWENTY-MEMBER room. Next month, if the war con- Students may become mem- tinues and if the Washington bers of the organization by sub- march does not erupt into (as mitting a $3 fee when the COOP The freshman elections for Vice-President Agnew has pre- opens. Following, a short wait- class officers have been post- dicted) a violent demonstration, ing period, a general meeting poned until after Thanksgiving a three day nationwide protest of all members will be held to to allow students who were will occur. The Memphis Com- Joe and Jackie (Rutledges both) pause, misty-eyed, after elect a Board of Governors. At running for Senator to now run mittee will then decide on furth- the death-knell of the late Senate is sounded. The final result this time, a working set of by- for another class office. er action (dependent upon the of its destruction, however, is the construction of a new govern- laws drawn up by an attorney black protest). mental order of commissions and involvement. will go into effect. 2 SOU'WESTER Friday, November 14, 19969 Faceruc'' .. ' F The Sou'wester Abernathy Joins.Marches Judith Warren Karen Francis Editor. Business Manager Hershel Lipow Tom Bayley IPolitics Managing Editor Assistant Editor Of Confrontation PHOTOGRAPHY: Peter Casparian, Sid Bowman, Bob Henry, John Spencer, By Debbie Sale tives met the marchers at the stated that rumor had 'it that he Tom Grant, Marc Dickey corner of Hernando and Linden, had been a rming kids with ART: Charlie Frame On Monday, Nov. 10, fifty- informing them that marching broomsticks to break windows PERSONAL ADVISORS TO EDITOR: Mary Margaret Weddington, Bob Tigert four people, including Dr. Ralph SPORTS EDITOR: Bruce Parker further would occasion their ar- and fight the cops. "Whoever Shettlesworth, David Garrett. Abernathy of the Southern i CIRCULATION MANAGERS: Virginia .5 rest. Abernathy and fifty-three is saying that must take me for PRODUCTION STAFF: Allison Cowan, Roberta Plenge, Mary Kay Shelton. Pat Christian Leadership Confer- Jones, Tommy Mobley, Barbara Fowke, David Lloyd, Dan Kenner, Mike others marched forward, were a fool. No sane man would send Kelley, Kathy Jorgenson. ence, were arrested while at- arrested, and, transported by kids with broomsticks to fight f4 tempting to march in the fifth ty; / } 5, +.},':' '.:f'v" : :{ :v.: ";"f.,'U4"::yet.: ' .u. °:+,v," A:.: ale.f'/< <; ;ey ft3. .aL',2..Y+ " 14 ; N>.4..::.+SFST %Q i1MF:Fn' a'FiiT< iw.: RX+FiFriG::,'G:.: ikCCh bus to the county jail. cops with nightsticks and guns. t 'tA"A:iRZ.f n...fAl:il: vi'{Ctrl...'v :34i.v.....1/...... ri"Fi:Si.'v"'/%+':'+:.:.: week of protest concerning the MARCHERS WERE still Goldsmith's windows are not St. Joseph's Hospital Strike and pouring from the church and where the Revolution is at. The the city school situation. Editorial - lining up when parade mar- Revolution is right here in the The arrests were the result shalls began to try to herd the ghetto where you know the ter- New Deal of a confrontation between City crowd back into the Temple. ritory better than whitey and The of Memphis police and the lead- The swiftness of police action not on Main Street." He would ers of the protests. Chief of Po- be walking alongside the march Student government at its best is an avenue to student startled those pouring out to lice Holloman had declared the to see that none of that juvenile autonomy; at its worst it is child's play. march. day before that the march could Reverend Smith stood up in stupidity went on. Honorable men all, our SGA, has worked hard to relieve the not be held after 4 p.m. on a truck bed, attempting to in- burden of irresponsibility and cumbersome structure. The result Monday afternoon. His reason MARCHERS LINED up at: form the marchers of the events 11:30 a.m. with repeated admo- is a unanimous proposal to restructure the Senate by the SGA was that the march would cause a block ahead. It was imposs- nitions broadcasted to "step out themselves. This says much for both the plan and the men who a traffic tie-up. ible to hear him over the noise of the ranks if you can not created it. Organizers of the march de- re- of the crowd. main non-violent." Abernathy In a report issued by the SGA the motives become obvious. clared that the protest had been Sweet Willi e Wine Watson spoke over the loud-speaker sys- "In short, the system represented by the Senate fostered only planned for four o'clock be- walked through the crowd ask- tem asking that there again be, frustration, alienation, and a deep-seated artificiality. What re- cause Reverend Abernathy ing for quiet and a return to the a peaceful, non-violent places this is a structure whose roots are based in the principle would not arrive in Memphis m a r c h church. He finally asked people in Memphis. that the essence of student government lies in the simple welfare until 3:45 p.m. to lead the to sit down in the street. The of the individual unencumbered by bureaucratic superstructure. march. They stated that the ,sit-down did not quiet the Many carried books and wore Every man is his own representative-no suffocating, artificial march had been planned well in crowd. "I came here to march, toothbrushes around their necks distance between the represented and representatives, no more advance and would not be called not to sit in the street." Many to illustrate their willingness to Senate scapegoat. No more abdication of individual responsibility off. were up and moving toward go the jail if need be to back to the Senate illusion of 'taking care of business.' Simply a positive HOLLOMAN ANNOUNCED Linden. their cause. A light shower did move to deal humanely and immediately with our own problems. that "all necessary force" Police waited until marchers little to daunt the marchers' "And thus this is not a cop-out to the recall and not an abolition would be used by the police in crossed Linden to take action. spirit. of student self government, but a radical rededication of .our be- order to insure that the march Marchers ran toward the barri- Dr. Abernathy, Jerry Wu r f, liefs, talents and powers to effect constructive and continuing would not be held. cade - some throwing what- head of the welfare." ever they could pick up off the American Federa- change for student Prior to the march a rally tion street. The po li ce helicopter of State, County, and Mu- The Senate Revision Plan is not as radical as it might appear. was held in Clayborn Temple nicipal Employees - AFL-CIO The Executive Council will be retained with the increased pro- C.M.E. Church. During the ral- moved in, dropping gas and smoke bombs into the crowd. and local leaders came to the vision of inclusion of other student forms. The Secretariate is ly, repeated instructions were head of Police moved in to disperse the the marchers; and the merely a consolidation of all-ready existing secretaries. Even if given to potential marchers as march began. crowd. A few shots could be The protesters the present Senate were to continue, such a consolidation 'would to what they should do if the continued heard. without incident down be only logical and necessary. police attempted to stop the Hernando to Linden to Main AT THE Likewise the information 'committee is a consolidation of what march. Marchers were told that DROPPING of the Street and City Hall. has been a highly inferior form .of coordinating publicity. leaders expected Mr. Holloman gas, marchers fled down the The greatest asset is a Budget Committee of new format that to be true to his word. They adjoining streets. The battle At City Hall the invocation will review, research, and disseminate all 'SGA funds. In the past stated that the remainder of the with police continued for hours was given by Father Martin of the Senate was responsible for the allocation .of. funds. Commis- marchers should return to the with marchers running at the St. Patrick's Catholic Church. sioners issued budgets at the beginning of their term which often Temple for further instructions barricades and police forcing Reverend H. Ralph Jackson tied up funds that could otherwise have been utilized by more after the arrests were made. them back to Linden. told the people that they were demanding projects. At 4:15 p.m., IReverend Aber- Inside the church plans were black and together, and that Offered only contingency funds, the future prospect of unused nathy arrived at Clayborn Tem- made for a supportive march their only leaders were those funds 'will be nil. However the coordination of funds will not be an ple. He spoke approximately the next morning. who would realize where the easy job. Certain established projects and events, such as Home- ten minutes, ending with, "The On Tuesday, November 11, black people were going and coming ,and Derby Day, can be reliably estimated. A veto power invitation I received asked me participants met at 10 a.m. get out there with them. should by all means be instituted to prevent the possibility of in- to speak at City Hall - not at at Clayborn Temple for a rally Jerry Wurf stated that the vesting too much power in the hands of the Budget Committee. Clayborn Temple. Let us march prior to the scheduled march. union' would stand behind the The referendum must be passed. It is the honest attempt of to City Hall despite the barriers Marchers were informed that struggle in Memphis a thing of in- up by this sick city." they were to march six abreast in the our elected officials to make student government thrown search for and to "keep cool even if whitey a common decency tegrity and responsibility. The burden is finally placed on students The police barricade was set for all mankind. being able to legislate their own desires. The structure is suffici- up on Hernando between Beale got hot." ently binding to make it work. and Linden. Police representa- Sweet Willie Wine .W at s on R e verend Abernathy pro- claimed his willingness to con- tinue the fight in Memphis a year and seven months after his "Now how do you want to wear it?" last visit to the city. "Memphis remains a sick city unwilling to Excerpt from RAMPARTS gooey lumps, like a woman "O.K., Pat," I said, bolting be looking like Sammy Davis realize the necessity for truth :MAGAZINE, Nov. 1969 slapping lard into a hot skillet. from the chair at last. "Get Jr. and justice." Taking a comb, he slowly this shit out quick, man." Pat (Copyright 1969, Ramparts I COULD HARDLY WAIT to Magazine, Inc.) worked the gas into my hair, led me to the sink and bent my get back to Rose Hill to see A Novella By inserting the comb at the head over it. Using a little green From front Lupe that night. I went home Campus Eldridge Cleaver of my head and pulling it hose with a spray nozzle at- Briefs and took a bath, careful not to Pat Moore's shop was up- straight back along the curve tached to it, he rinsed and THERE wet my hair or move my head WILL be a math club the Club Alabam. of my skull to the end of my washed and rinsed my head stairs, over too violently for fear of shak- meeting Wed., Nov. 19, at 7:30 I wanted my hair gassed, so hair at the base of my neck. until every last trace of the gas ing out the waves. When I met p.m. The program is entitled Chester took me to Pat Moore's, SOON THE COMB was run- was washed away, leaving a Lupe that night, under the "One equals every step of the ning through my hair without crop of wierd - looking hair minus one, and complaining clothesline next to Francis' pad fool. I wanted standing all over my head. other such stuff." way that I was a any opposition from the kinks. at the end of the row of apart- I was 17, Lupe In a moment every last kink (Looking back, these strands of to please Lupe. ments in the Projects, she said 26 - a woman over the murdered outright, hair impress me as the perfect was had been in her Mexican accent: "Eeeek! CAREERS FOR Southwestern flip little girls I'd been catch- and each strand of my hair was metaphor for the anarchy ex- What happened to your hair?" Graduates .will be the topic of a up till her. I wanted to im- stretched out on my head like isting among so-called Negroes ing She led me out of the darkness presentation by Dr. Gerhard press her with how slick a cat an elongated corpse on a bar- -in America. Each strand was a into a patch of light cast by Mally, Department of Political I was. room floor. "You be looking stranger to the other; each the street light up at the top of Science, on Wednesday, Novem- Pat Moore sat me in the bar- like 'Rudolph Valentino in a stood alone, resembling a mob the hill. "What did you do to ber 19, during the convocation ber's chair and draped a sheet minute," Pat said. The shit was rather than an organized mass. your hair?" she asked in a most period at the Briggs Student a KKK beginning to burn my skull, but Each strand seemed to be over my shoulders, like horrified tone. "You've ruined Center (East Lounge). Then he I didn't say anything. stumbling around blindly, seek- man without his hood. I wanted it!" she said, and tried to touch down, to leave it in as ing its true identity, seeing no- started greasing me long as I could, my hair. I knew that if she muck because I had been thing of itself in the strands SOUTHWESTERN'S spreading a thick gooey schooled to touched it she would knock the CHAP- hair- the it.) TER of the over my skin along the fact that, up to a certain around waves out. Gasses are for look- national physics into my crucial point, the Pat said, "Now how do you honor society line, then rubbing it longer you ing at, not for touching! "No!" Sigma Pi Sigma to protect the flesh from left the gas in, the straighter want to wear it, my man? Want will present a scalp I cautioned her, ""don't touch program by Dr. action of the hair- your hair became. me to fingerwave it or set it in John Strong, the violent If you left it it or you'll mess it up." "You're highly renowned chemicals he was in beyond that crucial the pachuco style with a duck- author and scholar, straightening point, crazy, Leroy!" she said. "I titled "In- then the acids and tail in the back? frared Astronomy at the Univer- about to apply. -lye in the don't like your hair that way. gas would eat all "Stick fingerwaves to me, sity of "If it gets too hot and burns the hair off I like it fuzzy like it was!" Mass." The meeting will more than you can stand, jus' your head, would eat all the baby," I said. And Pat went to be held 3 p.m., Friday, Nov. hollar," Pat said. Taking a rub- skin off, in fact, theoretically, work. When he finished, I had Then, crying, she wrenched 14, in Frazier Jelke, Lecture ber spatula, he began slapping it could eat your whole head a do just like Nat King Cole. herself violently from my arms Room A, and is open to all in- the gas onto my head in big off, bone and all. Had I chosen the pachuco, I'd and ran into her house. terested students. Friday, November 14, 1969 SOU'WESTER Page 3 Renowned Artist Turner Topic Of Sir Rothenstein Sir John Rothenstein, former zier Jelke Science Center. ship has been largely centered director of the Tate Gallery, As the son of William Rothen- in English art. He has written stein, a well known English a comprehensive work on Eng- London, and one of the world's painter and teacher, he grew up lish painters and several spe- leading authorities on Turner, in a family centrally interested cial studies such as on the pre- will speak in Memphis on Nov. in art and in daily contact with Raphaelites, or on individuals, including Augustus John, Con- at Memphis and leading exponents of the arts Southwestern der, Sickert, Paul Nash and, of Memphis Academy of Arts. and culture. the course, Turner, whom Rothen- He will lecture on Turner at After taking his M.A. at Ox- Southwestern on Monday stein believes is "the greatest eve- ford, Rothenstein accepted an While searching out news items, John (Robert Forster) ning, the seventeenth, at 8 p.m. painter produced by the Eng- invitation to lecture in America lish-speaking peoples." interviews Kennedy supporters in Medium Cool, now showing in Lecture Room E of the Fra- at the University of Kentucky the Memphian. at and at the University of Pitts- Sir John Rothenstein is cur- burgh. On this first stay in rently visiting professor at Ag- America during 1928-29, he got nes Scott College, Decatur, Stark Realities Portrayed first-hand acquaintance with Georgia. American painters; an interest that has continued throughout the years. A result of this in- Grape In Wexler's 'Medium Cool' terest and one of Sir John Roth- enstein's most effective contri- woman, he is able to ap- him as he was surrounded by Gripe By Johnny Rone this butions was the arrangement of proach his assignment of cover- rioters while filming. His cam- In the Nov. 6 referendum Medium Cool, the current at- a large retrospective show of ing the Democratic Convention era operator grabbed the cam- concerning the California traction at the Memphian American painting in the Tate with a greater understanding of era and continued shooting the Grape Boycott, voting theatre, centers around the city Gallery in 1946. This was the reality and of the moral respon- scene. showed of Chicago during the summer first time a comprehensive sibilities he has as a human of 1968, when the eyes of the NOT ONLY did Wexler em- show of American painters from 119 ------in favor being. world were focused on one of ploy a very mobile camera in the eighteenth century down to 75 opposed Their story reaches its climax the most frightening debacles filming his individual scenes, contemporaries of the day had Saga had agreed to abide and tragic conclusion during the of the. century, the Democratic but since most of the action and occurred in England. by the Senate's decision con- National Convention. violent confrontation b e t w e en drama takes place in Chicago, cerning the serving of grapes The same concept which The film mixes stark reality demonstrators and N a t i on a 1 he staged sequences in such in the refectory. The Senate brought the best of American with theatricality, using both Guardsmen. This is a powerful real-life settings as the Inter- determined to bring the mat- painting to England evidenced actors and non-professionals to sequence which was actually national Amphitheatre, G r a t ter before the student body itself in many activities of the tell a story about a television filmed during the height of the Park, ghetto homes and homes in the form of the referen- Tate Gallery during the years cameraman (R ob e r t Forster) street battle, making Medium of black militants. dum. Sir John was director. The Tate who goes about his business Cool probably the only non- THIS-IS a tremendously pow- Gallery became the liveliest photographing auto accidents, documentary feature which in- erful film in its realism. The modern museum of art and the fires, and other daily news. He cludes actual footage of the plotting and script of the fiction- center of public attention not chooses not to think too deeply demonstrations. al segment is not always of the LOCAL GENTRY usually directed at museums. about his sordid, sometimes hor- MEDIUM COOL MARKS the same caliber as the documen- Outfitters to Cents & Scholars rifying subject matter, but sees directorial debut of Haskell tary sections, unfortunately. While Sir John Rothenstein 144 N. AVALON himself as merely doing a job- Wexler, one of the sceen's most However, at those forceful has known painters, collectors, CITY CENTER never getting involved-even if distinguished cinematographers, moments when you realize that and museum directors all it means photographs first and and winner of an Academy all that technicolor blood you around the world, his scholar- calling the ambulance after- Award for Who's Afraid of Vir- see flowing so freely during the wards. ginia Woolf? He conceived the police riot is real, you are too BUT SLOWLY he finds him- project, wrote the screenplay, emotionally. caught up in the Ray Gammon's self becoming confronted with and photographed it. Wexler actual events to care about the .ESSO the harsh reality around him. himself was teargassed once defects of the fiction. Medium Restaurant After doing a human interest when a National Guardsman Cool is an honest effort and is CAR CARE CENTER story on a black man who found turned and fired a cannister at one of the films to see this year. Catering Service $10,000 on the floor of his taxi Lunches and Dinners Parkway and turned it in, John is faced You Can Afford Summer with an even greater story of IMMEDIATE OPENINGS-MEN STUDENTS Car Care Center human interest - the problems $300.00 GUARANTEED FOR 11 WEEKS PART-TIME WORK Draft Beer - Pizza life in the ghetto section of Cash of ALSO SOME FULL-TIME OPENINGS We Student Checks Chicago, the seething hate Summer at Parkway Phone 458-2433 which is replacing the apathetic CALL TODAY 278-2380 feeling of helplessness. p~ A ROMANCE develops be- tween John and Eileen (Verna Bloom), a woman living with Some clothes for her son in the Appalachian Ghetto section of the city. Through his relationship with WANT YOUR HAIRCUT TO some occasions

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59 So. Idlewild St. Pag 4 SOU'WESTER Friday, November 14, 1969 General's Victory Forces SC.A.C. Second Place Tie By Bruce Parker to the end zone. Baizley's PAT in three plays. Herman Morris made it 10-0, as the period covered the last eight on a The Southwestern football ended. sweep around right end. Early team clinched a tie for second In the second quarter, the in the final quarter, W & L place in the College Athletic wind both aided and hurt the moved to the Lynx 23, but the Conference last Saturday in Lynx. In the second svties of defense held on downs. Carter, Lexington, Va. against Wash- downs, Ralph Allen eluded the given excellent protection by ington & Lee University. Un- General secondary, and Carter the SW offensive line, hit three fortunately, it was a loss that found him for a beautiful 64- in a row to move the Lynx to clinched the tie, yard scoring strike. Mullins' the General 18, but the drive For most of the game, South- PAT try hit the upright bar, stalled here. W & L took over, western played catch-up ball. for his first miss of the season, but fumbled on the first play The 'Cats recovered from a 24-6 and with 11:39 left before inter- from -scrimmage, and Mike deficit midway through the mission, SW trailed, 10-6. Just Sadler recovered. Sides drove third quarter, to make it 24-19 before the half ended, Carter in from the one with 8:26 left .with 8:26 remaining in the aimed for Todd Robbins, who to make it 24-19. game, and drove to the General was all alone deep in General FOLLOWING T H E KICK- 20 before losing the ball on territory, but the wind carried OFF, Kuhn moved his team to 'Ron "'Hondo" McAfee widens the margin to twenty in the downs, with 1:17 showing on his pass . the Southwestern 33, using three Lynx victory over the LeMoyne Magicians in a scrimmage the clock. W & L BEGAN both of their minutes of valuable time. At Wednesday night. Jim Moss (51) moves in for the rebound. THE FIRST SERIES of second half drives deep in Lynx this point, however, Ken Le- Southwestern opens the season December 1 at the University downs indicated that the game territory. The first took three Blanc picked off a pass on the of Tennessee at Martin. would be decided in the air. On plays, covering 36 yards, all on ten, and returned it to the 24 the first play from scrimmage, a Kuhn-Bruce Green TD pass. to set the stage for the final Volleyball Title; Robert Carter found right end Moments later, the Generals Lynx drive. Carter hit first Mul- KAs, ATOs Decide Randall Mullins open in the covered 37 yards in eight plays, lins, then Ralph Allen for four flat, and Mullins rambled 27 with Green scoring again to in a row to move to the General Ping-Pong Championship still Open yards to the W & L 39. Both make it 24-6. 20. On fourth and one, however, teams had difficulty adjusting Thirty seconds later, just be- the General line stiffened, stop- By Bruce Parker play seems to characterize the to the strong wind, as Carter, fore the third period ended, the ping Morris at the line of scrim- The first round of intramural Taus, as they clipped the Pikes throwing into it in the first and Cats struck, moving sixty yards mage with 1:17 left. and the Es in three hotly-con- volleyball draws to a close Sun- third periods, threw three con- U day, with the unbeaten KAs tested matches, in spite of the secutive times without success. meeting the once-beaten ATOs efforts of Billy Watts 'and Don Toward the end of the first for the championship. Because Jenkins for the Pikes, and for Gentlemen & Lee of the draw, and because they James Megar and John Purvis period, Washington struck for ten points in two- Their Sons won both of their games, the for the Es, who missed the spik- & and-a-half minutes. After stop- have had to play .only ing ability of Perry Achorn in KAs ping the Lynx on their own 13, twice. their loss. George Taylor and James the Generals took over on the IN THEIR FIRST contest, Bruce Parker lead the Taus into Lynx 41, following a short punt. they took the Taus in straight the championship game Sunday QB Chuck Kuhn moved them games, 18-16, 15-10. Next, be- at 2. to the Southwestern 21, where hind the spiking of Jim Mills, DEFENDING CHAMPION on fourth-and-nine, John Baiz- Terry Hawkins, Gary Walte- Don Jenkins leads sixteen hope- ley booted a wind-aided 38-yard Davis w math, and Larry Parsons, and fuls in the ping-pong tourna- field goal to open the scoring the- setting of Tommy Talbot ments, with the team title go- with 2:58 left in the quarter. .E -LAURELWOOD and Jim Hendrix, they handed ing probably to the Sigma Nus Shortly after this, with 0:33 the SAE's their first loss, in or the SAEs. The Es, 'with four MEMPHIS three long games, to gain the men in the round of sixteen, showing, General safety Mike finals. should take it, and Jenkins has Brooks picked off a Carter pass Mid-South's most complete selection of fine The ATOs are 4-1, having to be favored to repeat as in- on the Lynx 32, and raced down names in men's clothing and furnishings beaten the freshmen, the PiKAs dividual champion. the right sideline untouched in- twice, and the SAEs. Clutch UNIVERSITY PARK CHRISTMAS IN EUROPE CLEANERS SIXTEEN GREAT DAYS and enjoying the Yule Season in Europe College group only. El Chapo SHIRT LAUNDRY Departing Memphis December 19. Shirts 5 for $1.20 All inclusive $749.00 Mexican Restaurant Dry Cleaning 8-lb. for $1.75 Write or call 2439 Summer 613 N. McLean CHARLES HARRELSON Ph. 274-5851 For Complete Itinerary Open 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon. - Thurs. AMERICAN & INTERNATIONAL TOPS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC. 11 a.m.- 12 p.m. Fri. - Sat. (901) 332-2734 BARBECUE 3783 Hwy. 51 So., Memphis 38116 Closed on Sundays Memphis Best Barbecue Sandwich amparts SouWester ALL OVER MEMPHIS Southwestern At Memphis Ives 2000 N. Parkway Students: Memphis, Tennessee 38112 6 issues Plus SOUTHWESTERN Eldridge Cleaver's Soul on Ice PHARMACY for $3.50 623 N. McLean Phone 272-7509

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