e ‘t have s coacli « wife low the ftically, Cbe Battalion kbyte ! or ha 1 me if ity sits Volume 61 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1965 Number 235 Committee For Johnny Cash Starts Petition Protesting Cancellation Armstrong Says Viet Cong Fighting For ‘Paradise’ ARMSTRONG NARRATES FILM Kenneth S. Armstrong, Cleveland newspaper correspondent, presented the first of the World Around Us lectures Wed nesday night at the Memorial Student Center. Armstrong narrated a color film on the fighting in Viet Nam. Evangelist Graham Sees 1 Youth Energy Explosion! By DANI PRESSWOOD Battalion Staff Writer Cleveland newspaper corres pondent Kenneth S. Armstrong said Wednesday night the Viet Cong are fighting for what they believe is an “instant paradise.” Presenting the first of the World Around Us lectures, Arm strong narrated a color film which provided an insight into the problems involved in fighting a war in this turmoiled country. A major problem is telling the enemy from the South Vietnam ese, he noted. “If he has a gun in his hand, aims it at you and fires, he’s a communist. This is the only way.” Armstrong laid the blame for the conflict on desire for econo mic gains. “The war was instigated, sus tained and directed by North Viet Nam, and encouraged by Red China for economic riches,” he said. He feels the North Vietnamese are fighting because the com munists have brainwashed them into believing they will obtain a “heaven on earth.” They believe they will have anything they want eventually. Armstrong said air power has provided a turning point in the Vietnamese struggle. “A year ago Americans over there thought we were fighting a losing battle,” he said. “Now they believe in time we will win.” He noted a difference in the attitudes of the Americans at home and those doing the fight ing. “All the complainers and critics are here in the United States. There are very few critical Amer icans in Viet Nam. They feel we are doing the right thing.” Vietnamese life as depicted in Armstrong’s film ranged from that of the country’s cultural capi tal of Hue to the villages of the hill people, where people are “still living as they did 3,000 years ago.” In a country where 80 percent of the natives earn their living off the land and the average in come is $75 per year, the “war is never far away.” Armstrong illustrated the frus tration of war with the 25-mile spike-studded wall built by vill agers 10 miles north of Qui Nhon. “Shortly after its completion the Vietnamese forces left the town,” he said. “Today Viet Cong are behind the wall instead of outside it, and 4% million hours of man labor were wasted.” In Plei Mrong and other vill ages of the high plateau special forces are attempting to trans pose the life of the people from that of the Stone Age to the 20th Century. People who hate all other Vietnamese, these Monte- nars are being won over gradually by South Viet Nam. “The Viet Cong are camping in their back yard and are burn ing their villages,” Armstrong said. “The American medic has done more than anyone else to win them over.” HOUSTON (A*) — Evangelist Billy Graham said Wednesday society is expecting the “greatest explosion of sexual energy in history.” “Young people grow up faster,” he said. “They demand a voice and have a right to a voice.” The evangelist, who opens a 10-day Crusade for Christ in the Domed Stadium Friday night, spoke to University of Houston students. He underwent surgery in Sep tember and twice postponed the Houston Crusade. Graham drew laughter from the students when he described beatniks as lonely and added he would like to “shake them, shave them and wash them.” He said the Bible and Christ are the answers to the problems of young people today. “God created man for purpose,” Graham said. “He is interested in you. When man rebels against God, it is sin. “To a Christian suffering has purpose, something he can ex perience with peace. Religion to most of us is a tradition. To the early church it was a dynamic, living experience. You cannot think yourself to Christ. You must trust him by faith.” About 2,000 students heard the talk in Cullen Auditorium. An estimated quarter million more heard it through special television circuits to colleges and schools in the Houston-Gulf Coast area. Freshmen Election Filing To Open Monday In MSC By BOB PALMER Battalion Staff Writer Filing for freshmen elections opens Monday in the Stu dent Programs Office of the Memorial Student Center, Har ris Pappas, Election Commission chairman, announced Wed nesday. Freshmen have until 5 p. m. Nov. 30 to file for the 14 positions. Offices contested in the Dec. 9 election are president, vice president, secretary-treasurer, social chairman, five election committee seats, four regular seats on the Student Senate and one pre-vet- one erinary Senate seat Freshmen seeking election must have a minimum grade point ratio at mid-semester of 1.25 and must maintain a 1.0 GPR overall. Senate candidates must have and keep a 1.5 GPR. Pappas said voting will be held for the first time in the basement of the MSC. Another change, will be that students must pres ent their identification cards be fore voting. ID’s will be punched in the lower left hand corner to ensure against foul play at the polls. On Dec. 1 a meeting will be held for all delegates in the Ballroom of the MSC to instruct them what camaigning procedures will be used during the election. Last year’s election showed a record turnout in a hot contest that even featured a female run ning for the social chairman. Another incident of last year’s election was the charges of elec tion rules violation, namely hav ing supporters vote more than once. Pappas said that this problem has been eliminated by the increased security precau tions. 1,000 Signatures Gained By Group By MIKE REYNOLDS A petition containing more than 1,000 signatures was Circulating Wednesday night by a group of students calling themselves the Committee for Johnny Cash. The petition read: “We, the undersigned, wish to make known our position in regard to the Town Hall appearance of Johnny Cash. We feel that the administration’s action in cancelling Mr. Cash’s performance was 1) an unfair prejudgment of Johnny Cash; 2) an infringement on the authority of the Memorial Student Center Council and 3) poorly timed. “In view of these facts, we strongly urge that Mr. Cash’s contract be renewed.” Cash was to appear at a Town Hall performance after the bon fire. His contract was broken by university officials Friday fol lowing what they termed un favorable publicity stemming from the arrest of the country and western singer in El Paso. The MSC Council had reviewed the situation Nov. 9 and enter tained a motion by Joe Buser, assistant director of student pub lications, that Cash’s contract be broken. The motion failed to gain a second. The Committee for Johnny Cash was also to have presented a resolution “objecting to the recent untimely and inappro priate action taken against Mr. Johnny Cash, and indirectly against the Memorial Student Center Council” at a noon meet ing of the Graduate Student Council today. The full text of the resolution appears as a letter to the editor on page 2. The committee expressed that the resolution would probably be presented to the Student Senate at their meeting Thursday night. The committee is made up of James Weatherby, James F. Crook, John Corns, Lynn R. La Motte, Stephen S. Thurman and James F. Baldauf. The commit tee is an independent body with out recognition from the uni versity’s administration. “We wish to present student opinion to the administration. We will give the petition to Earl Rudder at the earliest possible date,” Bauldauf said. “Every student has the right of petition and privilege of sug gestion and constructive criti cism. This does not sanction re bellious protests against consti tuted authority incompatible with good order. A student may be dismissed or assessed a lesser punishment for participation in any such movement. The Execu tive Committee will exercise jur isdiction in such matters. It may assess punishment for guilt in specific cases or it may require the withdrawal of any student, whenever in its judgement his general influence is harmful to the morale and successful func tioning of the University.” The Committee for Johnny Cash, CJC, also discussed tenta tive plans to have a petition available for students’ signatures today in the MSC coffee shop, the rotunda of the Academic Build ing and F-l-H of Hensel Apart ments. “We have been actively en gaged in communicating with Mr. Cash and his manager and we would like to see the admin istration change its mind,” Corns said. “We also have reports of some definite interest in an independ ently sponsored presentation of Mr. Cash on the night he was originally scheduled to appear. Breakaway Road Signs You are roaring along the ex pressway at a 70-mile per hour clip when a tire blows out. Your car careens out of control and hits a highway sign post. Sudden death or severe in juries have been general results of such crashes in the past. The future may hold a second chance for drivers who collide with fixed objects along roadways. Research at the Texas Trans portation Institute at Texas A&M may provide acceptable so lutions for highway safety in an 18-month study of breakaway road signs. The $367,000 project begins Dec. 1. Finances are being pro vided by federal aid highway funds of 12 states. Professor Charles J. Keese, executive officer of the TTI, said the first formal proposal for such a study was made in 1960. “The Texas Highway Depart ment and Texas Transportation Institute were concerned about hazards caused by large signs along freeways,” he said. “As more freeways were activated our fears regarding hazards created by guidance signs were verified by major accidents.” “In the fall of 1963 TTI joined the Texas Highway Department in cooperation with the U. S. Bu reau of Public Roads to study the problem,” Keese added. “A prac tical design for a breakaway sup port was developed. The THD is converting as many designs as Give Drivers Second Chance practical on an experimental bas is.” It was noted in the initial study that further research was need ed to find the “best” solution. “Cooperating agencies agreed that the project should be of na tional scope,” Keese noted. After six months of planning, repre sentatives of the 12 states and the Bureau of Public Roads will meet at A&M in early December to solidify the research schedule. Keese said TTI will consider vehicle crash research informa tion developed in the aerospace filed, the automobile industry and by other agencies to help produce an effective method for saving lives on the nation’s highways. “Some ideas which look im practical now due to costs and other factors might be made practical in the future by Amer ican industry,” Keese comment ed. Keese spoke of the feasibility of using impact attenuation de vices to absorb energy. “Some fixed objects will have to remain . . . ends of bridges and massive supports for over head signs spanning extremely wide facilities, for instance,” he explained. “A possible solution includes redirection of the ve hicle through use of guard rails. Another idea is to catch and de celerate the vehicle within the limits of human endurance and safety.” TTI also will study ways to reduce wind loads on massive overhead signs so they can be held in place by less solid sup ports. “Preliminary studies indicate we can reduce wind loads 50 per cent by using a design resembl ing a Venetian blind,” Keese pointed out. “This information has to be verified and best de signs determined.” Coupled with the study, TTI will evaluate the economics of designing signs which will col lapse under extremely high wind velocities. Keese said researchers will construct signs to collapse under light winds, then adapt the in formation to higher winds. “Among the information to be determined is the costs of getting these signs back into service,” he went on. “In this way we can de termine whether it would be more economical to replace a sign periodically or build a more mas sive permanent structure.” Another part of the study in volves the feasibility of hinge- type signs which would stand up under heavy wind loads by flap ping in the breeze. Future vehicle crashes into road signs may not be compar able to running into a feather bed, but TTI hopes to make the analogy as true as circumstances will allow. A car hit a “slip-joint” sign erected recently by the THD near Beaumont. A crushed front headlight and a dent in the bumper summed up the damage as the driver escaped injury. Had the man smashed into the sign 24 hours earlier when the permanent standard was still in place, he likely would have been killed, researchers noted.