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'But who is to govern?'... the division of authority at Rice by J. LEIGHTON READ In 1969 shud- man crises contributed most ture of a university. This raises a loss of power by someone else. This is the first of a series of dered though a period marked notably to a realization that the a basic question as to who Rather, he asserts that a more four articles discussing the role by the most serious internal members of this community should govern; where should equitable distribution of author- of students in decision-making conflicts in its sixty year his- and those who govern it hold authority lie in a private uni- ity would allow each of the at Rice. tory. The Masterson and Hoff- very different views of the na- versity such as ours? constituencies to be more ef- It would be useful to examine fective in carrying out their governance at Rice without ap- role in the university. pealing to the specific issues, The two most obvious candi- for a moment. Morris Keeton, dates for increased voice are writing for the American As- the faculty and the students. sociation for Higher Education Justification for faculty voice in in Shared Authority on Cam- campus governance usually pus, puts forward four grounds rest on their unique qualifica- for claiming the right to share tions which are essential to the in governing. task of a university. Some - Those whose concerns and people, however, argue that the lives are most affected by cam- trustees of an institution may pus activities should surely appropriately alter the rights have a part in their control. of those who freely opt to work - Those who are most competent for them. After all, they say, to do the work of the campus the campus is not to be con- should have a voice that en- fused with society. This tradi- sures the effective use of their tional attitude, resembling Am- competence. erican corporate organization, is volume 60, number 12 november 9, 1972 - Those whose cooperation is often at odds with the purposes essential to the effectiveness of of the university trustees if the campus in its work should those purposes include concern - have a place in governing that for a free society and the role Players to present Shaw classic facilitates their continuing co- of reason within it. The Rice Players will present tured, leisured pre-WWI Eu- the play been recognized as one operation. HEARTBREAK HOUSE, a rope. of Shaw's major plays. - Those whose sponsorship and Certainly there are difficult- comedy by George Bernard From Chekov (The Cherry Ticket prices are $1 for stu- resources created and sustain ies and disadvantages in facul- Shaw, in four performances Orchards), Ibsen and his dents and members of the Rice the institution, and thus make ty participation in governance. from November 15th to the observations of European so- Community and $2 for non-Rice possible the opportunity of Keeton observes that a partisan higher education, are entitled to 18th, at 8:00 PM in Hamman ciety Shaw was able to inter- adults. The box office will open faculty member, in a decision protect and further their pur- Hall on the Rice campus. Neil pret the dissolution of that so- on Wednesday, Nov. 8, from affecting others, may preses his poses and interests. Havens will direct this second ciety. In his preface to HEART- 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM, in the interest improperly at their production of the season. BREAK HOUSE, Shaw des- Rice Memorial Center. Reserva- These claims apply different- expense, and cogently adds: "In ly to each of the university's a complex matter an expert is HEARTBREAK HOUSE was cribes the society which he tions may be made by calling constituencies: faculty, stu- prone to overestimate the written in the latter years of portrays in this play, the nice 528-4554. people who "... were the only dents, staff, administration, weight of that part of it in Shaw's life after he had be- The cast: Hesione Hushabye alumni, trustees, and the public. repositories of culture who had Which he is expert." However, come disillusioned with cul- - Joan Rea Green; Hector Husha- According to Keeton, the cur- social opportunities of contact by careful attention to the prob- bye - Michael Ytterberg; Ellie rent national crisis in campus with (the) politicians, adminis- lems associated with faculty Dunn - Kathleen Ford; Mazzini goverance is primarily one of ti'ators, and newspaper proprie- participation, they can share to Dunn - Don Shewey; Ariadne doubt and disagreement about the considerable extent of their It's time to tors, or any chance of sharing Utterword - Rebecca Greene; the satisfaction of these claims competencies, cooperation, and or influencing their activities. Nurse Guinness - Mary Ellen in the choice of purposes, style, interest. register again But they shrank from that con- Blade; Billy Dunn - Barry R. and priorities for the university. Registration for. the spring tact. They hated politics. They Rieff; Captain Shotover^- Rob- He claims that the fuller en- Similarly, students have semester of 1973 is 'scheduled did not wish to realize Utopia ert Rittner; Randall Utterword franchisement of constituencies grounds for participation. They for November 13-16. Current for the common people: they - T. Martin Grace; Alfred Man- must be used to create a cli- are the primary clients for the freshmen and graduate students wished to realize their favorite gan - Kirk Brush. mate of effective collaboration. campus services, consumers if have already registered for the fictions and poems in their own Costumes were designed by Keeton states that this en- you will. At Rice, full tuition second semester and will not be lives; and, when they could, Rebecca Greene, sets by Rick franchisement is not like cut- pays approximately one third involved; only 2nd, 3rd, 4th they lived without scruple on Cordray and lighting by Barry ting a power pie, in which of the cost of education. Other and 5th year students will re- incomes which they did nothing Reed. someone's gain occurs only with fees, like room and board are gister. to earn." Shaw was disillu- usually collected to cover the Registration forms, which are sioned because he saw the total cost to the school. In edu- very simple, must be completed social potential of the "new in- cation, some say "let the buyer and returned to the Registrar's telligencia" being wasted on beware" should pertain. But Office by 5:00 p.m. November themselves in their frivolous students often have little choice 16. A late fee of $25.00 will habits of non - conformity, in- in which school they will attend be assessed for registrations stead of directing the whole and have no real basis for judg- ing until they are enrolled. Of; received after November 16. society toward social good. course, there is no money back Second-year students will re- The play takes place in the guarantee. gister in the residential col- house of Captain Shotover, a leges. The colleges have the retired sea captain, who has Though the student's rights folders containing degree pro- retreated into a fantasy world. as a client are often given as grams which were distributed Living with him are his mid- a reason for voice in govern- last Spring, and each student dle-aged daughter, Hesione, her ance, this is not the most per- should be registered by the pseudo - philandering husband, suasive argument. In higher same Faculty Associate who re- Hector, and her former nanny, education, the cooperation of gistered him last April. Nurse Guinness. Ellie Dunn, the student is essential for good The 3rd, 4th and 5th year Hesione's young friend, Ellie's results. Student disenchantment studeijts will register in their industrial tycoon — fiance, with curriculum or policies is major departments. The depart- Mangan, and Ellie's father, not always accompanied with ments should still have the fold- Mazzini, are invited to the loud confrontation, but some- eras containing degree pro- house so that Hesione can break times only with a loss of in- grams, for their major students. up the engagement. Captain terest and participation in the The Registrar's Office will Shotover's other daughter, Lady academic programs of the uni- provide each student with an Ariadne Uttervvord, arrives for versity. On the other hand, co- up-to-date transcript and with a. a visit, and is followed by her operation achieved by giving schedule of courses in which, enamoured brother-ni-law, the students a voice in policy according to their records, he is Randall. The plot proceeds, making is of tremendous value currently enrolled. Additional doubles back, goes into a tail- to the educational mission of copies of the "S«hedule of Cour- spin and ends with a generally a school. ses Offered 1972-73" with two chaotic denouncement. The benefits of student shad- addenda reflecting changes will When the play was produced ing in the mission of a universi- be available for departments in 1921 it was called a failure. and colleges upon request. ty are not, however, promoted Not until the last ten years has by the token delegation • of authority to provide "training in leadership and- democratic tradition", as shown by large Student drops out to solve drug crises scale repudiation of the es- by MARY LUND outside. Labs may be able to selves some perspective, and to eryday realities than Rice, Dale tablishment system on cam- Today many people are ques- offer sonje. practical applica- find, some goals toward which said he reached an impasse in puses in the last seven . years, tioning the value of the tradi- tions of the theory learned in to work. his education and, like and stu- like the other constituencies of tional four-year university edu- the physical sciences, but in the One such person was Dale dents, did not have any idea the university, students have a cation. A college diploma no social sciences, one cannot Gorczynski, who did drop out which way he was heading. Dur- contribution to make to the longer guarantees a high pay- simulate society's problems in for a year. He was formerly a ing his sophomore year, he al- real gavernance of a university. ing job or for that matter any the condensed form of a three student at St. John's University most dropped out, but then de-< Comments on tlfte series, either job, though one can still argue or four hour lab. For these and in Santa Fe, New Mexico, a cided to wait until the end of to the author or the editor, are that a college education is nec- other reasons some students university that uses a tradition- that year. That summer he encouraged. An analysis of the ceessary simply for intellectual decide to take a route other al approach to education, with found a job working for "Out- student's role in decision-mak- development. Still, life and tear- than the straight four-year an emphasis on classics study. reach Drug Crisis Center" in ing at Rice, and the current op- ing behind the hedge do not grind and venture out into the In this scholastic environment, the Santa Fe area and began* eration of the Board of Gov- necessarily prepare one for life world to learn, to give them- even farther removed from ev- (Continued on Page 3) ernors, will follow next week. threshing-it-out is:- : 1 I2*SJSTTSSESSriv! Some assorted gripes and editorial introspection Sir: now that the "R" is a fait ac- compli, we can more profitably Your letter seems rather con- consider, not whether it should Asker refuses editorial 'sedative' tradictory; you disagree strong- To the Editor: the important issue of Univer- after the election. Would not have been built, but how the the creative editor have printed ly with two editorials you Ideally a student newspaper sity fiscal policy. If Mr. Jack- existing facility should be used. an editorial analyzing the depth claim encourage only silence. should be a forum to discuss is- son thinks the financing of the Those purposes which would sues of concern to the universi- "R" room does not merit our his candidate's position and its most benefit the University do ty community. Unfortunately concern, why did he even ad- merits, a few weeks before the You seem to hav missed the not coincide with those to which the Thresher's editorial policy dress himself to the issue? election? point; I apologize if I 'Was un- this year has not only failed to clear. The "R" room editorial it is now put. Mr. Jackson, are the discus- stimulate discussion, it has of- The last editorial cannot pos- certainly did not commend the sions of such issues as the A newspaper, like any other ten served to stifle it. sibly provoke anything but dis- financial finaglings involved, cussion of a moot point in the Presidential election and Uni- nor did it seek to 'stifle' discus- forum, should prefer to in- Last week's editorials make versity finances so fiery that this point clear. The first not pages of our paper. Mr. Jack- sion. Like the special articles fluence the future rather than we need a sedative? only misses the central issue of son's perfunctory (four sen- two weeks ago, it presented cer- to review the past. To that end, tain facts which might interest the opportunity cost of lending tences) endorsement of candi- Sincerely, let discussion continue. $300,000 at no interest, but at- date Nixon was so timed that Jim Asker, those who would study the sub- tempts to shut off discussion on responses could only be printed Hanszen '74 ject. It also pointed out that, —SJ the rice thresher Editorial "misuse" protested Dear Thresher: body in support of that can- students, who do indeed own the In a recent editorial the Rice didate. Such solidarity did not Thresher, were not denied their Thresher endorsed the re-elec- exist for the re-election of say. 'No member of the Rice tion of President Ilichard M. President Nixon. We, the under- community wrote to the Thresh- Nixon. As the editor refused to signed, protest the editor's mis- er with any opinion about any sign his name at the bottom of use of the student newspaper candidate. of Rice University. the editorial, we can only as- Second: while solidarity is a sume that the editor, Steve Mike Boulden rare commodity, the best infor- Jackson, was pretending to rep- Reuben Leslie, Jr. mation available at the time resent the entire student body. A. Terry Hemphill indicated that a small plurality editorial We find it preesumptuous for Kay Preston of Rice students would express the Thresher to endorse any Doug Welty views similar to those of that "The opinions expressed herein are not necessarily political candidate. We also find and 16 others editorial. Furthermore, the full those of anyone except the writers. Obviously." it reprehensible for the editor results of that poll were re- ported in the same issue, show- to use the Thresher as a soap- The tone of your letter would The last lines of the Thresher masthead apply es- ing the campus to be anything box for his own political opi- indicate that it was prompted pecially to editorial matter. It has been suggested that but united. an editorial should represent only a consensus of student nions. Rice students own the by disagreement with my views Thresher and should have some rather than any concern for Third: the above is irrelevant. opinion, or that it may, wrongly, be taken as such. say before being saddled with propriety. Of course, you have Editorials are not written by Ridiculous. such political pablum. every right to your opinion. counting noses. You obviously The editor takes all responsibility for what goes didn't know that, or anything An unsigned endorsement for Nevertheless, your premises wrong with the newspaper. He also takes a little credit else, about the subject. Please a political candidate implies the are incorrect and your conclu- read this week's editorial. for what goes right, enough caffeine to keep function- solidarity of the entire student sions illogical. First: the Rice —SJ ing, and a piece of Page Two most weeks. Not every week; if there's no subject worth commenting on, there's no editorial. There are other ways to fill space. Editorialization is a privilege not to be abused; Film review branded pompous neither is it to be denied. The press is free to'report the To the editor: polished in its subtle use of the Andy Hurley has had the news and to comment on it; its responsibility is to keep Without being overly nit- "duel of the banjos" throughout nerve to write one of the three picking, one can say of a re- the two separate. the movie. or so bad reviews of Deliver- viewer that he partakes of the The most important cause of ance in the country, and, al- But no newspaper above high school caliber deter- nature of inanity. He is, that is the movie's impact, however, though I personally disagree, I mines editorial policy by a show of hands. Note that to say, an individual whose is the screenplay itself. Writ- applaud him for his individual- editorial policy does not mean "the content of editorials"; comments come to be meaning- ten by Dickey, the author of ity in writing it and the Thresh- it refers to the arbitrary decisions of what is "fit to less beyond themselves, un- the book, the screenplay is a er's for printing it. Hurley related to a larger universe of print" and how it should be treated. Arbitrary, because distillation of the book's es- says that "the function of the discourse (i.e. the subject of his sence; although it is not an ex- no absolute standards exist for style, form or taste. And reviewer is fulfilled whenever review). In fact, one may say act transcription, it has all of people are moved to hold up undemocratic, like any art; journalism is not a mechan- of his writing that it indeed be- the book's nightmare quality. the "reality' of the report of an ical process. comes elliptical, as he drags It Deliverance is not the best object to their o>vn perception references to world literature Editorial comment is equally undemocratic. It is movie of the past few years, it of it. Disjunctions are bound to from "Chicken Little" to The is at least one of the best. The occur — and why that should the opinion of a person, or at most a small group, who,, Old Man and the Sea into a rule holds. make anybody very angry or merely by virtue of the fact that they put out a paper, vacuum o f comprehensibility David Safford upset escapes me." are permitted the right or privilege of a special position and relevance. Cash Tilton for their own opinions,- among all those that they print. All of which is introductory Marty Sosland hdd It is customary, and not unreasonable. An editor may to the conclusion of our - re- be' no wiser than anyone else, but it is his job to be bet- marks on the alleged review of ter informed. the film Deliverance. We do not Girl's College "security" hit say "review", because the ar- A responsible editorial must be intended in the inter- ticle merely transforms glimp- To the editor: wild animal on a leash. Similar ests of a newspaper's subscribers; it need not agree with ses (however nearsighted) of Last Thursday night I had precautions are followed at them all. The right or responsibility to express an opin- the film and novel into pseudo- the misfortune of leaving my some industrial plants to pro- ion is not a function of its popularity. To suggest other- intellectual bullshit. Let us note books in the "Bastille". The tect trade secrets. I am sur- wise is both presumptuous and reprehensible. that, as a rule, we consider it "Bastille", for those of you who prised we do not follow their invalid film criticism to com- are unacquainted with the re- lead and require visitor's pas- Signing of editorials, of course, is a matter of style; pare a film to its novel pre- mote outposts of Rice Univer- ses. ^Vhat secrets hide behirfd it's redundant. You know who they represent. decessor. The rule holds. sity, lies along the northeast the '^Bastille's" walls that merit This editorial, like those in the past and some yet Deliverance is not, in fact, border of the campus. such extensive precautions 1.o come, remains the opinion and work of - a stupidly subtle, understated The entire complex is sur- against Rice males? Or perhaps the editor. pomposity — seven if it were rounded by bushes and gardens. we have a medeaval town that possible for a film to be such The tallest building with its must protect itself from roam- an unlikely combination of mis- high fence and gun holes is es- ing wolves. STEVE JACKSON "used adjectives. Deliverance is pecially formidable ^at night. I did not want to attack the Editor instead an effective movie. It This edifice looms into the sky place. All I wanted was to get rice MALCOLM WADDELL takes possesesion of you from for eight stories, insurmount- my books. The watchman even Business Manager the very beginning, and hold3 able to even a professional thresher refused to get them for me. The H. Dnviri DnnKlo Assistant Editor Lew Hancock Advertising Manager you spellbound until the very mountain climber. Not to be Morty Rich Assistant Editor Virgin^ Jee Assistant Business end.. overlooked are the nearby em- treatment I received was in- Denn Ornish Head Photographer Manager humane and undignified. Not One main factor in the mov- placements and the underbrush Bill Jones Sports Editor Ralph Umbarger Calendar Editor only should the men of Rice Greg Norris Sports Editor ie's impact is its technical ex- for additional security. At night receive a formal apology, but cellence. The photography is the three buildings are locked, Staff: Andy Hurley, Chip Lansdell, Charles Pau, Frank Presler, Mike measures should be undertaken perhaps the best of any movie and guarded by night watch- Ross. Lee Silvcrthorn, Gary Brewton, Jim Lawler, Mark Onak, Cathe Krause. to insure that we do not receive Michael Peck, Ci'.'iig Stafford, Randy Guebert, Forrest* Johnson, Wendy Nord- yet .made; you are not a spec- men. •strom, James Wilhoit, Guyle Cavin, Ircpe Schumiliver, Laura Johnston, Bob ( such harsh treatment in the fu- Bunch, Ann Wilhoit. - tator, you are instead a silent Consider now what is neces- ture. The Rice Thresher, official student newspaper of Rice University, is puWi participant surrounded by the sary for a Rice Male to enter. lished weekly on Thursday except during holidays and examination periods by- students of Rice (pniVersity, , Texna 77001. telephone 528-4141 X2Zx S~ unfolding nightmare. The mu- He must; be escorted: iti som«i Jim Latimer rt 645. The opinions expressed herein arc not necessarily those of anyone except'the writers. Obviously. sical background is similarly places even registered, like a i Hanszen '73

the rice thresher, november 9, 1972—page 2 Colleges offer non-archi architecture, library sciences Baker College will offer its exposed to methods of architec- dents drawn from the graduate each week of the term. The sequences, the course will in- college course, Architecture for tural design, an opportunity not and undergraduate programs. class will be organized as a clude at least two outside proj- Non - Architects, again this provided within the structure of Eighteen students will be ac- planned sequence of architec- etc. A number of field trips are spring term. This course was departmental courses. cepted to allow a 3:1 student: tural problems. Lecture mate- also planned. developed in order that non- The course will be taught by teacher ratio. The course will rial will be kept to a minimum. Application for enrollment architecture students might be a team of six architecture stu- meet for three hours one night In addition to the problem should be sent to Box 787 Baker College and should in- clude name, major, classifica- tion and a short essay on why -Med Society vants to bite your neck the applicant wishes to take the The Rice Pre-Med Society is be staffed by technicians and tients who need blood in order tains all of its blood from volun- course. A deadline of November again sponsoring a charity doctors from the V. A, Hospital. to live. Also, many kidney trans- tary donors like YOU — the 18 has been set for application. blood drive this fall. The blood The V. A. Hospital is in dire plants and other major opera- members of the Rice Commun- Additional information on the will be donated to the Veteran's need of blood. This hospital tions which required blood are ity. The Pre-Med Society has course may be obtained by call- set its goal at 300 pints and Administration Hospital of uses between 450 and 500 pints being performed daily. There is ing Jeffi-ey Ochsner, 524-2208. hopes to surpass that. In the Houston. The drive will be held of blood monthly. This past just not enough blood to go For the first time, Sid Rich- around!! past, the Rice Community has on Wednesday, Thursday, and month, 504 whole blood units ardson will offer "Richardson The V. A. Hospital is the only always readily responded to 340: AN EXPLORATION IN Friday — Nov. 15, 16, & 17 were administered to 130 pa- hospital in Houston which ad- help relieve the blood shortage LIBRARY SCIENCE." Describ- from 9:00am until 5:00pm in tients. At the present time, the ministers blood free of charge in Houston. YOUR help is again ed as "a presentation of pro- the Grand Ballroom of the Rice V. A. Hospital has a relatively to the patient. Where does the needed. cessing, information retrieval, Memorial Center. The drive will large number of leukemia pa- hospital get its blood? It ob- Many people have fears about giving blood. The following research techniques, together facts are intended to allay any with the opportunity for self- fears and dispell any unfounded directed reading and research," Media Center hosts conference rumors that may have been the course is designed so that spread. The 'human body con- the student will be able to free- by DEAN ORNISH computer-generated images for into four sessions: tains between 12 and 15 pints ly choose the greater part oi" On Monday and Tuesday, communications, research, & Monday: 10-12 a.m.: Physical of blood depending upon the the material he reads for credit. Nov. 13 & 14, the Meedia Cen- teaching in all areas of the uni- Sciences; 2-4 p.m.: Behavioral size of the individual. The body Format alternate lectures with ter will host a conference on versity. Sciences. replaces the volume of blood seminar discussions; the course the uses of media. It will All faculty & students are Tuesday: 10-12 a.m.: Art & lost in seven to nine hours. The will open by familiarizing stu- be an introduction to the welcome at all sessions. Architecture; 2-4 p.m.: Human- red blood cell level is back to dents with the facilities and use of film, videotape, and The conference will be divided ities. normal in about three weeks. history of Fondren. All will be held in the Media Giving blood does not leave one Center Auditorium. weak!! It will, however, make Two papers will be assigned; More than one session may you pretty hungry. they, along with attendance at Fifth engi dept. accredited be attended. the first four lectures, comple- The Materials Science/Me- The Pre-Med Society is at- program becomes the fifth en- Sessions will include demon- tion of reading periods, and tallurgy Program at Rice has tempting a pre-drive sign up gineering curriculum at Rice to strations of film and videotape synopses of all books read, will received full accreditation from earn accreditation. The other program. This is designed to equipment available; explana- determine grades. the Engineer's Council for Pro- four are the mechanical, civil, eliminate waits and expedite tion of c o m p u t e r-generated fessional Development, Franz R. chemical and electrical engi- matters during the blood drive. images; and excerpts from the Brotzen, professor of materials neering programs. This program's primary pur- science, announced last week. various media "forms relevant pose is to make giving blood as The Engineers' Council for to each conference division. "Rice becomes one of the very Professional Development, com- easy and convenient as possible. RMC sponsors few institutions in the South- posed of representatives of all Explains Katherine Brown: Student, staff, and faculty west at which students can ob- engineering professional socie- "The conference is an effort to members may reserve a time by tain a complete accredited un- ties, periodically reviews the en- bring together the facilities and talking to the blood drive coor- Next week, Rice will sponsor dergraduate as well as graduate gineering programs in the uni- expertise at the Media Center dinators in the various residen- an exhibition and sale or origi- eriucatioi|ffin, the important versities of the United States with the thinking & problems tial colleges. If, however, you nal graphic art by contemporary fields of materials science, ma- and Canada to maintain the in various disciplines. Many in- do not wish to sign up in ad- and old master artists. Ar- terials engineering and metal- standards of engineering educa- expensive techniques are avail- vance, just drop by the RMC ranged by the Ferdinand Roten lurgy," said Brotzen. tion. able for the faculty and stu- at any time during the blood Galleries of Baltimore, Mary- drive and make your donation. Materials science is an inter- Accreditation is recognition dents to aid both teaching and land, the exhibition will be held disciplinary field that deals with that the curriculum meets the research. In advance, I wish to thank on Wednesday, November 15, all of the members of the Rice the structure, properties, pro- highest standards of the pro- "We hope the conference will 1972, in the Rice Memorial Cen- lead to concrete proposals which Community for your coopera- cessing and treatment of all en- fession. Graduates from an ac- ter. credited engineering program will lead to a communications tion in helping to eradicate the gineering materials such as me- have greater ease in obtaining center for the university for co- blood shortage in Houston. Included in the exhibition will tals, plastics and ceramics. a professional engineer's license, ordinating and facilitating the Philip Samuels be over 1,000 original etchings, The materials science degree according to Brotzen. use of media." Blood Drive Chairman lithographs, and woodcuts by artists such as Picasso, Chagall, Miro, Dali, Goya, Renoir, Koll- witz, and many others, includ- Dropping out . ing contemporary A m erica n, European, and Japanese print- (Continued from Page 1) by a Houston psychiatrist, Dr. for a few months on beans and want to become medical doctors makers. Prices start at $5.00 a year of work that he con- Tim Consodine, who says that canned goods donated from local simply for the income it will with the majority priced under siders as educational as any every teenager needs every day churches. But eventually the bring in should see the quality $100.00. year of formal schooling. of grownig up that he has dur- government finally came of doctors resulting from those "Outreach Drug Crisis Cen- ing adolescence. Each day that through, and the program is kind of goals. ter" is unique in many ways, he spends drunk or high is one still going. How many students come to Checks Cashed for valuable day of growing up he one of which is that it is run What do you say to a thir- college knowing what they want Rice Customers has missed. Sometimes younger totally by young people with no teen-year-old who calls a drug or how many leave with some- Jackson Lee professional degrees (some of adolescents will only take this center and says he is going to thing of value? Taking time whom are ex-drug user them- kind of advice from someone kill himself? You could laugh Exxon Service selves). Its purpose is to help nearer their age, and for this and hang up, or realize that off to see and experience the 2361 Rice — JA 8-0148 adolescents who are experienc- reason, "Outreach Drug Crisis some of* these people are not world may help some students Mechanic On Duty ing trouble with drugs. Al- Center" and other clinics like kidding. Talking to troubled find what they want and en- though the "drug culture" sup- it are valuable for the ser- people, if you are sensitive to hance what they already know. vices they supply. posedly centers around the col- their problems and deal with This different approach to edu- TIMES lege age group, most college Dale was instrumental in them in a deliberate manner, cation may be well worth try- BARBER SHOP students would be amazed at keeping this program going at can be a great teacher of human ing, if one has the courage to Haircuts — $2.50 the young age of some drug a crucial time in its existence. nature. Dale's interest and attempt something other than with student I.D. users at these drug clinics It was originally supported by knowledge of psychology, of 2423 Times 528-9440 whose ages range from around a private individual and, event- course, increased during his the ordinary. 13 through 18. The-drugs they ually, the funds started getting year at "Outreach" while deal- used could be considered "soft low. The logical step was to ap- ing with the crisis that came drugs" for the main part; grass, ply to the government for as- when one deals with the volatile speed, and barbiturates. Those . sistance, but as a program with mixture of adolescents and Paintings Watercolors Drawings who work with young drug no professional affiliations and drugs. He also formulated some users find that their drug use with some professionals actual- goals for himself in the midst Lithographs is usually a symptom of deep- ly against it, it faced an uphill of his work and started look- by er troubles of adolescence which struggle in the quest for gov- ing at schools that he might the surrealist painter and poet they try to erase with drugs. ernment funds. However, a want to attend. "Now he is at When talking to young ado- grant proposal was written, and Rice as a junior sociology major lescents who are quite experi- Dale states that he acted as and is planning to attend med- DELPORTE enced in the use of drugs, an the front man in many of their ical school, though he had NOVEMBER 13-DECEMBER 20 older college student may find dealings with the bureaucratic no well formed goals before The artist will dedicate his record on Sunday himself naive and unable to machine. He found that this working at the clinic. Having afternoon, November 12, lpm-5pm empathize with the problems was itself an educational proc- been exposed to many of the of the drug user if he has not ess, learning the working of kinds of people who work in gone through the same thing. bureaucracy, and the good and the fields of social problems, MILLIOUD GALLERY One of the biggest problems is evil that exist in it. Money was he found there are those who explaining to teenagers why not forthcoming at the time it genuinely care as well as those Lamar Towers-Buffalo Spdwy on W. Alabama they should not get high. was needed, and those who who do not, as in the medical Open Tues-Fri. 10am-4:30pm, Sat-Sun lpm-5pm A good explanation was given worked on the project subsisted profession. Those students who

the rice threshe^ november 9, 1972—page 3 Love becomes art in mind-staggering Savage Messiah by ANDY HURLEY this Ken Russell movie, deliv- son never had. Scott Anthony The violent cutting and occa- and depraved in a way not Far and away the visually ers a monolog so beautiful that as the Vorticist Futurist sculp- sional slimy or otherwise yicky purely sexual so much as gen- richest film around now is Sav- one is almost staggered into in- tor Henri Gaudier (contempor- dirtiness is there, too. But this erally cultural. Russell has been age Messiah. It's a pleasure to comprehension. It's reminiscent ary of Joyce, Pound, Brancusi, one, as opposed on Women in nasty and suddenly he looks to watch this movie, and a plea- of Glenda Jackson, especially Wyndham Lewis and the others Love and The Devils, is about be a nice old-fashioned human- sure to hear. Dorothy Tutin, in Marat/Sade, but Tutin brings who made the pre-WWI renais- life and the joy of it, about ist. And Gaudier-Brzeska is who plays Sophie Brzeska in a charm to her role that Jack- sance) is vital, springy, ener- creativity and ardent energy quite generously portrayed, getic, and sympathetic. And the and sublimation of love into art. might be proud of his represen- movie profits by the level of It's about hatred of death and tation. energy Anthony manages to decay and war. And I must At last two movies in town. maintain. retrogress to say that the mov- Flip a coin to choose if you Ken Russell's usual sexual ie is beautiful as well as are can't see both, but try, at least, TRAVEL UNLIMITED, INC. aberrances are there — Henri its themes; its form and its to see one. It may be the last and Sophia fall in love, live to- content coalesce brilliantly. chance to see a good movie at a 2476 Bolsover Dr. 526-3164 gether and call each other This is a fine movie, and commercial theatre for the next brother and sister. And though that's surprising in view of Rus- couple of months unless Diana Sophie doesn't like men, Henri sell's previous movies, all of Ross's Billie Holliday flick "In the Village" won't say the same for himself. which were vicious and ugly comes through. Complete Travel Service Concerts: Liberty's middle name by DON SHEWEY like that of others; he stands Shortly before their concert A veritable showcase of "... I know the voices dying with a dying fall out, and his show last Thurs- at Liberty Hall, Joy of Cooking talents paraded through Liberty Beneath the music from a farther room . . day was one of those excellent parted with Toni Brown, which Hall last week, including Goose concerts that Liberty Hall only would seem to leave the band in Creek Symphony, Boz Scaggs, sees maybe twice a year. With pieces. Surprisingly enough it J. Alfred PRUFROCK's (Beer Parlour) and Joy of Cooking. Having a relatively small (five-piece) didn't; Terri Garthwaite did a A most unusual atmosphere—Chess, Classical recordings, seen all three adds a little band which produced a surpris- wonderful job of taking front bridge, and other games of innocence. dimension to a review of the ingly full sound, Boz ran and center and becoming the concerts because of the obvious through a set of his best songs, central point of the band — so 423 Westheimer 528-8360 comparisons. starting with an old favorite, much so that Joy of Cooking For those over 21 — Daily Four 'til Two When Goose Creek Symphony "We Were Always Sweet- could be called Terri Garth- Noon 'til Two on weekends and Pure Prairie League were hearts." He did almost every- waite and Band. They did a onstage for their Sunday night thing a Boz Scaggs freak would fine combination of material show October 29, it was coun- want to hear—the exquisite from their three Capitol albums try music time. Pure Prairie "Downright Women," the bluesy —"Pilot," "Humpty Dumpty," League have the distinction of "Loan Me a Dime," the mellow "Don't the Moon Look Fat and being the only decent opening- "Slowly in the West," and a Lonesome?" and the Joy of act I've ever seen at Liberty knockout song from his newest Cooking trademark, "Browns- VILLAGE ARCO Hall (the other two show open- album, "Dinah Flo." A standing ville/Mockingbird." The only ers last week, Storm and Uncle ovation brought him back to time the presence of Toni Brown Free lube with every oil change Vinty, were too bad for words), do Muddy Waters' "I Feel Good was felt was when Terri Garth- and they were hot city, mama. (I Hope I Always Will)," end- waite sang one of her songs, Tune-up Special—8-cyl $24.95 6-cyl $19.50 They started their set by play- ing the finest concert in this "Love K e e p s Tearing at My Regular 25.9 — Premium 29.9 ing five songs without a break, city in months and leaving the Heart". It was clear that the beginning with one dedicated audience in ecstasy. affection between the two band Rice at Greenbriar to the king of country music, When Joy of Cooking came leaders made the parting pain- "I'll Fix Your Flat Tire, Merle." Checks cashed ivith Rice I.D. together a little over two years ful. An enthusiastic audience As the main attraction, Goose ago, they caused a stir among wouldn't let Joy of Cooking off- Creek Symphony wasn't as im- the rock ranks, not only because stage without three encores. pressive as Pure Prairie two women (Toni Brown and Liberty Hall never fails to League, but they played a fine Terri Garthwaite) led the band, prove itself the most suitable set which included a super- covering rhythm guitar, slide atmosphere for concerts in country "I've Just Seen a Face" guitar, steel pedal guitar, key- Houston. Freda and the Fire- (long live the Beatles), a Merle boards, and vocals between dogs and Townes Van Zandt H a g g a r d song, "Tonight the them, but because they were will play this weekend, Novem- , Bottle Let Me Down," and a good. ber 10 and 11. good number of traditionals Boz Scaggs has never had to worry about his music sounding Autry caught with its hair down by JEANNINE KLEIN their frustrated rage at each Rice Memorial Center What happens when a com- other, and then separate in an Wednesday, Nov. 15 PROBLEM pletely unrestrained wife re- angry burst when the play- 9am-4pm turns to her "too restrained" wright tires of fighting wars PREGNANCY husband after a five months with his little tin soldiers. separation and announces that Several of the techniques, Information Service she is full of joy at having such as the dumb show, and For information on Abortion, found herself-while living with many of the lines are really PURCHASES MAY BE CHARGED Adoption, Birth Control, and "such a lovely young girl"-and marvellous. The dumb show, ARRANGED BY , Medical Referral, call Hous- proposes to set up a menage a which preceeds and explains FERDINAND ROTEN GALLERIES ton (713) 523-2521 or 523- trois on the spot? each of the two acts, is an in- 7408-523-5354 or 523-7453 A good many things could teresting and somewhat original happen, but, with Paul John device, serving to reinforce the Stevens' "Her Hair Down Sing- Hamlet-like aspects of the mod- ing", Playwright's Showcase ern play. David Upp (the merely presents us with another King), Lorelei de la Reza (the one of those "confrontation" Queen), and Dolores Baum (the plays which seem to abound on Princess) represented the alter the contemporary stage. The egos of Konn Cullinane (as format is predictable: a prob- John Ransome), Jo Simmons, lem is set up, the characters (Laura Ransome), and Janeri group themselves in varying Walker (Kay), respectively. configurations to scream out (Continued on Page 8)

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the rice thresher, november 9, 1972—page 5 Blame the losses on a lack of potent run or pass attack by BILL JONES and the lack of a potent passing at- attack which was averaging 233 GREG NORMS tack can also lose games for yards per game. Against Tech, For the last three weeks the Owls, even against Texas the Owls chose to pass only 23 Coach Conover has attributed Tech, 10-6. times (10 of which were in the the Rice defeats to the lack of Going into Saturday's game fourth quarter), while running a potent running attack. And the Owls had lost three in a 41 times, for a result of a sea- Saturday afternoon, Coach Con- row with a running attack that son's high 160 yards rushing, over further developed this was averaging 89 yards per but only 148 yards passing, The theme by ably displaying that game; contrasted to a passing yardage figures are totally ir- relevant, as the effectiveness of the Rice attack was mani- fested by their inability to score. COLLEGIATE CLEANERS Creating the runing attack 2430 Rice Blvd. 523-5887 was Gary Fergusbn, who had PICK-UP and DELIVERY by far the best day of any Rice Ladies After 6pm Gents Before 8am runner this year, gaining 111 yards on 20 carries. The strength of Ferguson's running jim lawler PREGNANT? was aided by the excellent blocking of Bart Goforth, Ron Rice threw only 10 times, com- Surprisingly, the Rice defense NEED HELP? Waedemon and Gary Butler. pleting three to Collins and two did everything short of winning Adoption Services, Pregnancy Testing, Etc. . For the first time this year the to Texas Tech defenders. in shutting down the powerful CALL: (215) 457-4139 Tech attack. Although fraught offensive line opened up more However, the Owls did have National Family Planning Council, Ltd. with injuries, the Owls managed than marginal holes, while also some passing standouts in Ed- to hold the number one offen- providing a new commodity — win Collins and Gary Butler. sive team in the conference to downfield blocking. Collins stood out with his 7 less than 300 yards. The de- It seems strange to us that receptions for 95 yards, while fense successfully stymied the 526-3781 2502 TANGLEY with the rushing attack work- All-American candidate Butler double threat of quarterback ing so well the Owls would for- stood out in that he and Gadd Jo§ Barnes, allowing him only sake their heretofore-excellent could combine for only one com- 21 yards passing and 40 yards Demo's Auto Service passing attack. In the first half pletion the entire game. rushing, compared to his usual Air Conditioning Transmissions 180 yards of total offense. In Brakes Electronic FREE addition, they held Tech stand- Alignment Engine Analysis Wanted: male models for Sebring hair design con- outs McCutcheon and Smith to test (longer hair designs) Texas championship. almost human performances as the Tech runners gained only TIRE TRUE CUSTOM BALANCING Sunday, Nov 12, 1 :30-3 :30 Contact C. W. Ledbetter 748-9046 233 yards. Thursday the Owlets end their season with a 7:30 game against the winless Baylor Cubs, at Arbuckle Memorial Stadium (west end of campus.)

BILLY THE PLASTIC PARTY GLASSES " RICE TEXAS ARKANSAS A&M HOLIDAY DESIGNS ,25-$2.00 WASAPU THE GOOD LIFE "Dirty Little Billy"is a different Things for the House. "IN THE VILLAGE" kind of movie. 2512 Rice Blvd It's not about the Billy The Kid 522-7244 you've known and loved. It's about EMPLOYMENT the real William H. Bonney. U. S. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE And the real William H. AGENCY Unique professional oppor- Bonney was a loser. tunities are available for those seniors and graduate "Dirty Little Billy" is the end students' completing work in: *Computer Science of his legend. "•'Economics Engineering (EE, ME, AE) Foreign Area Studies Foreign Languages (High Proficiency Required) Chinese Polish French Portugese German Russian Italian Serbo-Croatian Japanese Vietnamese Korean Geography * History *International Relations COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents *Journalism *Physics * Political Science "DIRTY LITTLE BILLY" Psychology (PhD) starring Secretarial Science * Graduate Students Only MICHAEL J. POLLARD All assignments are in the LEEPURCELL RICHARD EVANS CHARLES AIOMAN Washington, D. C. area. Some DRAN HAMILTON AND WILLARDSAGE require foreign travel. Pre- A JACK L. WARNER and WRG/DRAGOTI, INC. Production ference is given in the case of Story and Screenplay by CHARLES MOSS and STAN DRAGOT1 male applicants to those who have fulfilled their military Music composed and conducted by SASCHA BURLAND obligation. U. S. citizenship Produced by JACK L. WARNER is required. OBTAIN YOUR Directed by STAN DRAGOTI APPLICATION FROM THE PLACEMENT OFFICE. R MAIL THE APPLICATION TO OUR OFFICE BY 17 NOVEMBER 1972. ALL NOW QUALIFIED APPLICANTS LOEWS FREE PARKING DELMAN WILL BE INTERVIEWED COURTESY SEARS 13lY & MAIN AT RICHMOND • 5291257^ AT AN EARLY DATE. the rice thresher, november 9, 1972—page 6 Big Balls and Grabbers Goose opponents in intramurals biTy„ BILmilL nBELn Lr edged the Wonc^oHanszen HogTTntrss in an LeagueT.pno-np. HeaH*»ftdd Goose Walt 7t7fVhi EntranceT^ntrnrife.. Theyv submitted most talent. Theyv opened byj Except for the college play- intra-Hanszen struggle for the Buenger, taking a candid gander to the Ball Grabbers 86-16. The edging NROTC 44-30 but did offs, touch football is dead, and cellar. at the situation, says he has a Ball Grabbers' big challenge in not play up to their potential. basketball has arisen to take good chance to take it all this this league appears to be the Chung Liu, which could be a Tuesday league also has two its place. Now that the first year. Despite a poor shooting Guatemala Gomers. Frank Al- dark horse, did in the Does 43- contenders and either of these week's play is done, this hawk- night they overwhelmed the len's Gomers started off the 25. The Thermochickens fried teams could go all the way. Big eye of the hoop is ready with Colonels 72-13 in their opener. season defeating the Erotic In- the Farmers 36-20 in the other Balls blew by the Plumbers, his survey of the circuits. Boyd's Bombers zipped the nuendo 49-23. The other league contest. 78-14 with 20 pts. from Wayne The Monday league appears Acme Maid Service 46-31 and battle saw Slaughterhouse 5 One last note in intramural Yates and 16 from Dave Knorr. to be the'^weakest of the 5 Header's outdefensed the Old edge the White Wizards 34-31 football; the Dynamic Oligos The Balls are an intimidating leagues, but has two teams UAW-MF 30-20 but neither despite the absence of their edged the Allylic Radicals for team and chould be a cinch for capable of capturing the league team looks strong enough to star. a 13-12 come-from-behind vic- the brawlball crown. Bengt crown. The Tough Nougies, led challenge the Geese. Friday league is somewhat a tory, as Bill Characklis' team Bengston makes a second run at by Bill Anderson and Eric The Custer Memorial Trophy mystery although Paul Inman's finally cinched the Grad leagxie a championship with a tea m Kaplan, jammed the Janissaries of this week goes to Virginia's Dynasty appears to have the title. called the Gophers. The Goph- 51-23 to establish themselves ers won big 60-10 over Scott as one contender. The other Litin's Rockets. L'Equipe edged front runner, Atomic Tech, led the Stoned Rangers 46-42 to by Pepper Sawyer and Danny round out the action. McGee, bombed the R^t Sea 41- GAMES ! POPCORN ! 18 despite rumors of a fix. In The Geese appear ready to the other contest, the Kwicks fly away with the Wednesday PRIZES ! HOT DOGS ! Jugs coach predicts massacre by GUYLE CAVIN Ann (the Hands) Fannin, Jan The Annual Powderpuff Mas- (Wobbly Knees) (?) Godfrey, sacre promises to be just that. and especially your capable cen- COME TO THE FAIR!! If Jones shows up after their ter Marion (the Rock) John- poor attendance, sloppy prac- son. Our new recruits are an tices, and unqualified coaching exceptionally inspired group led Beer, fun, & games for all! staff it will be remarkable. by Sheeryl (the Block) Wall- Their players are big and pow- ing, Broadway Bobbie Bayless Saturday, November 11 erful — the Cheryl Spzak — and so many others. We're Alpha Morgan combination be- ready. Baker-Will Rice Quad ing very dangerous — but (Guyle Cavin is, among other Brown has the quickness and things, the coach of the Little speed to overcome with youth Brown Jugs Powderpuff Foot- and real desire anything that ball Team). Sponsored by EBLS & SPS Jones can do. I can, after two full weeks of hard-hitting prac- tices, safely say that Brown will Huser's Jewelry annihilate the late champions Diamonds — Watches of last year. Jewelry Especially tough this year 2409 Rice Blvd. 528-4413 will be returning lettermen Mar- gai*et (the Killer) Walker, Ger- PIZZA HUT maine (Ragin Cajun) Bagot, Cynthia (the Flash) Hamil, 2400 W. Holcombe DOG & CAT (on the corner of Holcombe & Morningside) Meat Market 664-1391 Rice golfers tie 2216 S. Shepherd Breeders Choice 526-7536 Liver, Hearts, Kidney champion UT Ground Chicken The Rice Owl Golf Team tied Vita Loaf defending national champion MEN IT Texas, and finished ahead of Doghouse Packing Arkansas, T.C.U. and Baylor in 2121 Richmond Sm. Lg. the Fall S.W.C. Golf Champion- 528-4915 ships held two weeks ago at the Mozzarella Cheese . . . . 1.35 2.05 Oak Cliff Country Club in Dal- Green Pepper . 1.60 2.40 las. Tn the head-on team match 1.55 2.30 play championship, John Scott, Help Your Brother . 1.70 2.70 playing number one, and fresh- Give Blood man Ernie Danner, playing . 1.70 2.70 number two, defeated the Texas Donors 18-20 years old . 1.70 2.70 one and two men and picked must have parental ifp three points, also winning a permission Anchovy . 1.70 2.70 point in the "best ball of part- ners" event. BLOOD BANK . 1.70 2.70 Scott, a junior from Danger- OF HOUSTON Pizza Supreme . 2.05 3.20 field, finished eighth in the in- dividual championship with a 2209 W. Holcombe Jalapeno Pepper . 1.65 2.55 Call MO 7-6142 score of 227 for 54 holes. Dan- Black Olive . 1.65 2.55 ner, from Humble, had a 235 Open Mon. thru Sat. „over the tough Oak Cliff course, 7:30am - 3:00pm Vs Cheese Vz Sausage . . 1.55 2.40 site of the Dallas Open. PLASMA Added Ingredients .20 .30 Bill Lee finished just behind DONATIONS NEEDED Danner. Mark Johnson rounded out the Owl scoring. 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the rice thresher, november 9, 1972—page 7 rlci people's calendar Thursday the ninth the team. Not too hard, though. Laly's Revenge by the San Francisco those ugly corpuscles removed. Free 3pm The Blue Planet. Call Baker 7pm OBB UH A New Leaf 75c. 3pm Men's Quad: Carnival 'til 7. Mime Troupe. at the RMC 'til 5pm. Planetarium for reservations. 7:30pm Chapel service; "The Bhag- Beer & games, courtesy of EBLS & 8:30pm Jones Hall downtown. Works 7pm OB Ballroom, THX 1138. 7:30pm The Illustrated Man. $1 in avad Gita (Hindu Sonj? of God)." SPS. Tickets sold on grounds. by Schubert & Mahler. 7:30pm Lamar Aud. Pfeiffer's Peo- Hamman Hall. 7 ;30pm Rice and Baylor freshmen 7:30pm Rebecca in CL Lec. $1 or sub- Tuesday the fourteenth ple, a play. 7:30pm Hanszen. Youse guys orta be 8pm Hamman Hall. H-H-Hearbreak. play football in the stadium. scription. 7:30pm AH2 UT, Joe Hill. EOc. pretty good by now. 8pm Media Center. The Joyless Street. 8pm Jones Hall, U. of St. Thomas 8pm Media films. They finish Dr. Ma- 7:30 Bio 131, Pre-Med Society meet- 10pm OBB UH THX MCXXXVIII. University Jazz Ensemble performs. buse and show Bringing up Baby. ing. .75 QRPTZ 10pm OB Ballroom, UH. the decline 10pm Rebecca again, $1 or subscrip- 8pm Jones Hall, U. of St. Thomas. tion. PLACEMENT of A New Leaf. 76c. The University Singers do Hadyn. Saturday the eighteenth Friday the tenth 12m Metropolitan Theatre 1016 Main. 8pm Liberty Hall, Revenge. The Magic Christian. 7:30pm At Lamar they do the play OFFICE 6pm This is National Snake Week, 8:30pm Jones Hall, downtown, Klezi again. enjoy your Queen Snake casserole Sunday the twelfth conducts again. 8pm Hamman Hall. H-H-H-House. INTERVIEWS and Python pie. 10:30am at Texas World Speedway. 10pm AH2. No use making a mount- 8pm Media Center. II Grido. DATE COMPANY 7:30pm 123 HB Rice Christian Com- Bicycle races kick off the annual ain out of a Joe Hill, 60c. 1:30pm College Station, the Owls go 14 Friedrich Refrigerators; munity. Texas 500 stock races. Wednesday the fifteenth for a big one. Spm Southwest Theatre in the Village. 15-16 Atlantic Richfield Co. 12 :45pm Snakefood platters at the col- 9am Grand Hall, RMC; until 5pm Premier of The Man With the Dog lege of your choice. Sunday the nineteenth 15-16 The Johns Hopikins U. Blood Drive. Suit. 7:45pm Quoth the purple worm: Re- 2pm Track stadium. The annual 7pm PL210 SPS meeting—lecture on Applied Physics Lab. 8pm Liberty Hall. Towness van Zandt Brown-Jones powderpuff football lated two weeks ago, Hobbit. Superconductivity, discussion and re- 17 First National Bank ir and Freda and the Firedogs. game. 7pm OBerholtzer Ballroom, UH. THX freshments. Spm Doktor Mabuse, Der Spieler at 4pm Burke Baker Planetarium, see 1138 75c. Dallas 7pm 201 Ryon. Nuclear Power in the the Media Center. Also silent classic The Blue Planet. Call 526-4273 for 8pm Media Center Lecture by Town- 30 Phoenix Mutual Life U.S. & Radiological Safety. This is Sunrise. There'll be a seminar on reservations. send. the film for you paranoiacs. Ins. Co. spieling Sat. in the basement of Wil- 4:30pm He got his potato chips open, Spm Hamman Hall. Heartbreak House. 8pm Liberty Hall. They talk too much. Nov. ly's Statue. but they all spilled. Stupid armadil- 8:30pm Jones Hall; National Israeli 8pm Hamman Hall. Rice Playei's pre- Song Festival of 1972. Call Foley's 15 Duke Un., School of 11pm Liberty Hall. Same show, new los. miere of Heartbreak House, a comedy for tickets. liquids. 5:30pm Brown Lib. Hillel lecture by Business Adm by George Bernard Shaw. 11:45:36 four more minutes to pre- Rabbi Lazoroff. 16 Un. of Pennsylvania, vent tomorrow. You lose, Carl. 7:30pm Hanszen commons. Card Thursday the sixteenth 9am Grand Hall. Bring the red stuff Wharton Grad. Div. 12m KVRL, KLOL Simulcast, Sen- f reaks beware: the deck's marked. 16 Columbia Un., School of satiation. Monday the thirteenth before 5pm. 10pm U.H. They show THX again. Saturday the eleventh 7pm Man With the Movie Camera. Law !,'am 309 Sewall. The last day of the Houston Room, UH free. Friday the seventeenth FREE PREGNANCY 27 Stanford Un., Grad Schl. Southwestern Philosophical Society 7:30pm 123 Bio Lab. TexPIRG meet- 8am RMC ounge. Grad. wives bake TESTING of Business Annual Meeting. ing. We missed you, Jeff. sale. 29 Princeton University, 1pm Little Rock. Be thinking about Spm Liberty Hall .' . . The Dragon 9am Grand Hall. Last chance to get Pregnancy Termination Woodrow Wilson School Call 24 Hours A Day of Public & International notes and notices (202) 872-8070 Affairs Business — Graduate schools of School of Law will interview at 7:30 in the auditorium of Dec Business ai*e conducting in- pre-law students on Thurs- the Great Southern Life In- THE NEW 4 The Johns Hopkins Un., terviews through December 5. day, November 16, from 2pm- surance Building, 3121 Buf- WOMAN'S CLINIC School of Advanced In- Sign-up sheets are posted in 5pm. Please sign up for in- falo Speedway. In addition to ternational Studies the Placement Office. It is terviews in the placement of- regular business, a slide show 4-5 Duke Un., School of Law important that you sign the fice. Dr. Garland Marshall will be presented by Barry 1990 M Street, N.W. 5 Carnegie - Mellon Un., list. All of the schools are will be interviewing for the Moore, a Houston architect. Washington, D.C., 20036 Grad School of Indus- especially interested in minor- Washington University School For more information call trial Adm. ity and women applicants, and of Medicine from l-5pm Nov. 524-0607. most offer special fellowships 14, and from 9-5pm Nov. 15. * * * or financial aid. • sj« Sfc Fowl — The last deadline for Conservation — The local chap- contributions to the fowl is "Wedding Photography by Ed Moers (trained by ter of the Sierra Club will November 17th. We will die Yearbook — a meeting of all Master Craftsman Photographer, Bob Garrett of hold its monthly meeting this without you, but we won't Atlanta Georgia)' 783-6729" those interested in working Tuesday night, November 21, have died in vain. on the 1972 Campanile, the yearbook of Rice University, will be held on Monday, No- vember 13, at 7pm. Photo- Autry House.. graphers, writers, and (Continued from Page 4) She begins her characterization CONTACT LENS PHOTO GREY LENS gnomes (this means you, The characters in the dumb as a frightened girl function- former high school yearbook show were excellent. They ing on the level of a puppet. editor!!) are invited to at- maintained the stylized rigidity But gradually she metamorpho- tend . essential to a dumb show, with- sizes into a flesh-and-blood VILLAGE OPTICAL out losing any grace of move- woman, culminating in a marvel- ment. Their hesitancy to touch lous scene with John Ransome. Interviews — there will be both PHOTO-SUN. Phone 529-2766 was well and subtly emphasized, From the madness of Shakes- pre-law and pre-med inter- thus marvellously underlining peare's Ophelia, she freely views in the coming weeks. HOUSTON, TEX. 2415 TIMES BLVD. the parallel reluctance of the adapts an approach to John, of- Mr. John F. Kullberg from spoken players. fering herself to him as Ophelia the Columbia University Unfortunately, the rigidity of offers up her flowers. the dumb show was often car- Unfortunately, Laura and ried into the spoken play with- GOOD USED CARPETS Roy choose this glorius moment out the same fluidity and grace. to stomp back into the play, $15 each Average room sizes Kenn Cullinane was particular- reducing it to a series of de- Also, good used Drapes $3 ly guilty of this; while some ART CINEMA generating confrontations, and pair and up woodenness was essential to Open 11:00 am — Sun 1:00 pm simultaneously reducing Kay WA 6-9026 CASH ONLY his characterization, it was of- back to her frightened puppet. ten overdone. Barry Gilmore 6140 Village Parkway Y> Block East of The end of the play is left (as Roy) went to the opposite 528-8186 Kirby Dr. between hanging in fire and smoke, as-is Times & Amherst extreme, over-acting and over- In University Village the audience, who leave wonder- Non-Profit Org. projecting too much for such ing what might have been done Couples, Students and Military personnel with U.S. POSTAGE a small theater. proper I.D. receive $1.00 discount off regular ad- PAID Janeri Walker was easily the if playwright and actors had mission at Houston's Original Art Cinema. Athletes Permit No. 7549 best actress in the play. Her done a little more work. FREE Houston, Texas movements meshed well with those of the dumb show, draw- Always the finest quality in adult motion pictures ARMSTRONG & McCALL ing the play closer into unity. from top producers Beauty Supplies Wholesale & Retail All programs rated XXX — Minimum Age 18 misclassifieds Student Discounts Call 528-8186 for features & times Misclassifieds are cheap ads 2503 Rice Blvd. 529-3941 U\ for Rice people. Rates are 7/10# LATE SHOW FRI & SAT per letter; spaces are free. Buy, y . sell, trade, insult your friends. Bring them by the Thresher of- fice. FEATURING PARACHUTE: 7 panel T-U TICKLED PINK MARTHATURNER ^ £ Army, orange and white, cus- AT t -£> tom padded harness. $50. 529- WORLD FAMOUS IOOK 5045. new happy hours all DRINKS 2 for 1 * • # K 1PM-3PM U Next week, just for fun, mis- 3PM-4PM classifieds will be free. Really. s No charge. It's an experiment. M00H 5 PM 2 * AFTER 5 PM 3" We will edit when necessary. If MATINEE this works out, we'll make it 4:30 PM ALL YOU CAN EAT permanent. AT THE JAM SESSION PIANO BAR MON. THRU FRI. 4:30- "FRIED SHRIMP BOILED SHRIMP 9:00 pm WITH FEATURING ARNETT COBB •BOILED FLOUNDER > OYSTERS SHELL ARNETT COBB & KENNY ANDREWS > BAR-B-QUE LINKS •SALADS-HOT ROUS STAG LADIES DRINKS Joe Morgan's Pharmacy % Price MON thru THURS. 3800 FARNHAM Phone 526-5309 Houston, Texas Located in United Food No. 2 DINE AND DANCE NO COVER • 2430 Rice Blvd. 524-6903 the rice thresher, november 9, 1972—page 8