ets bas the pool ajor leapt » out ] winning t» fane serif ay night, 'BELTS tunics Illfll’S tofdr *♦ 713/846.2101 T»xu 77840 E md ige? «longest mullra- moniosis 'ou won’t fiv World lition. But iul infer- ian in any . In addi- and an J.S. time dear def- nt mean- idiomatic m's life. i want to approved lina 1000 ics. Isni re? Only $7.50 -indexed, 3 voana LOVELINESS Jackie Jackson models an outfit in preparation for the fall fashion show Monday. The show is sponsored by the House and Fashion Committee of the Memorial Student Center. New MSC “To Let Fashion Conscious Do Their Thing” Committee Slates 3 Fashion Shows By Janie Wallace Battalion Staff Writer Is “hig-h fashion” coming to A&M? The organization of a new com mittee on the Memorial Student Center Council and Directorate will allow fashion-conscious to “do their thing” on campus. Dale Torgenson, chairman of the House and Fashion Commit tee, has activities ranging from an all-male fashion show to a Nieman-Marcus fashion fair on the calendar. “Football Fashions,” schedul ed for Monday, is the current activity of the committee. The show will be at 8 p.m. in the MSC Ballroom with clothes be ing furnished by Hoppy’s Sports wear in Bryan. The ’69 football season is the theme of the show. “An informal atmosphere and live entertainment are the high lights of the show,” Mrs. Torgen son said. “A $25 gift certificate from Hoppy’s will be offered as a door prize.” A casual presentation with a smoker atmosphere will be the all male fashion show, she said, adding the “unstaged” presenta tion will be held in the spring. “The big project this year is the Nieman show, but we want the men on campus to become in volved with the other projects,” she explained. “We will also be looking into the Playboy Man—on- Campus program.” The fashion fair program, scheduled for March, is also spon sored by Nieman-Marcus. The fair relates the principles, cur rent trends and ideas in fashion, make-up, hair, and modeling, said Ann Randall, fashion adviser for Nieman-Marcus. “Each girl interested in the fair will pay a $10 fee to attend,” Mrs. Torgenson said. “It lasts from 9 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. in the MSC Ballroom.” “After the instruction in mod eling and make-up techniques, the models for the N-M fashion show will be selected,” she said. “The student will bring all her own make-up, falls and hairpieces to the fair,” Miss Randall noted. The committee and the fashion fair is open to anyone interested in the program. This year, all Aggie wives and students are in vited to participate on the com mittee, Mrs. Torgenson said. Officers are Lynred Crook- shank, secretary and co-ordinator with University Women and Mrs. Torgenson. Applications can be filled out at the Student Program in the MSC office for one male publicity officer and one female publicity officer. Also, the committee is taking applications for a male treasurer. Cbe Battalion Vol. 65 No. 10 College Station, Texas Tuesday, September 30, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 Corps Pass-By Will Honor 63 Camp Leaders “ONE MORE TIME—ONLY LOUDER ! ! ” Freshmen try out for the position of fish yell leader under tonight, five fish will be selected as yell leaders. They will the watchful eye of one of A&M’s five upperclassmen yell lead yells at all games of the fish football and basket- leaders. When tryouts, being held in the Grove, are through ball games. (Photo by Steve Bryant) Newsman to Discuss Iron Curtain Revolt The Corps of Cadets will give “eyes right” Wednesday in honor of outstanding summer camp per formances of 63 of its members. The 5:30 p.m. review on the Memorial Student Center drill field will be one of the earliest of several years. Fourth Army commander Lt. Gen. Harry H. Critz will take sa lutes. The former A&M student will head a reviewing line includ ing A&M President Earl Rudder, Army Col. Jim H. McCoy, com mandant, and Air Force Col. K. C. Hanna, professor of aerospace studies. Inside information on the new Peace Corps will be furnished students and the general public at a special Oct. 7 meeting of the university’s Peace Corps Club. The 7:30 p.m. public-free meet ing in Room 3D of the Memorial Student Center will precede a November recruiting drive, an nounced Dr. Manuel M. Daven port. The campus Peace Corps ad visory council chairman returned recently from the Southern Re gion Peace Corps Conference in Atlanta, at which problems, pos sible solutions and future plans of the Corps were discussed. Davenport will speak on “New Directions of the Peace Corps” at the Tuesday meeting. He said considerable change has been inaugurated at the na- Sixty-three cadets who achieved top ratings at Army and Air Force ROTC summer training will be cited at the review, Mc Coy announced. McCoy said that the 3,000- member corps, commanded by Cadet Col. Matthew R. Carroll of Annandale, Va., is composed of 20 Army ROTC companies and 14 AFROTC squadrons. Wednesday’s formal military formation will be the corps’ earli est in a number of years and probably the first ever to precede a football game march-in, he said. Inclement weather forced can- tional level by Director Joe Blatchford, recently appointed by President Nixon. “Internal changes, all phases of operations and other inside in formation will be discussed,” Davenport said. “Answers will also be furnished to three com mon questions: Is the Peace Corps part of the CIA ? What are the statistical chances of get ting into the Peace Corps from A&M ? and, has the Peace Corps discriminated against white Southern college students?” He noted that Peace Corps re visions in 1970 recruiting plans call for 70 per cent college grad uates, still a sizable portion of the volunteer force. The percent age previously was 90 per cent. He noted the A&M recruiting drive will be Nov. 3 to 7. cellation of a leadoff review in December of last year for the 14th Student Conference on Na tional Affairs. Aside from home game march-ins and corps trip parades, the corps usually has a minimum number of formal ap pearances during the fall semes ter. “We hope this will become a regular event, so that the corps will get an early taste of an ac tual formal military formation,” McCoy commented. “It will serve to prepare the corps for other fall semester reviews, such as SCONA.” General Critz reviewed the corps march-in for the A&M- Arkansas football game last fall. The three-star general attended A&M during 1929-31. The civil engineering major and Company “B” Engineers cadet corporal then transferred to West Point where he was commissioned. He made the 1943 landing and participated in subsequent opera tions of the “Fighting First” In fantry Division in North Africa during World War II. The Teague native commanded the First’s 101st Airborne Divi sion, I Corps in Korea and VII Corps artillery in Germany. Gen eral Critz taught at and was sec retary of the Army War College and was special assistant to the commander and staff secretary of the Supreme Headquarters Al lied Powers Europe (SHAPE) in Paris. The next public appearance of the corps will be an Oct. 25 march-in for the A&M - Baylor football game. Haynes Johnson, syndicated newspaper serialist and author who traveled Europe with Presi dent Nixon, will speak here Thursday on a portion of his Au gust journey. “Revolt Behind the Iron Cur tain” will be the topic of John son’s 8 p.m. Great Issues address in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom. The 1969 College Station Unit ed Chest fund drive opens Wed nesday with a 4 p.m. kickoff meeting in the Memorial Student Center. United Chest officials hope to raise a record $28,050 to support the 20 charitable and civic agen cies included in this year’s budget. Kickoff speaker will be Dan Johnston of Austin, service unit supervisor for the Salvation Army in Texas. Approximately 150 volunteer Great Issues chairman Tom Fitzhugh said all admittance will be free. Johnson parted with Nixon’s caravan after visits to London, Paris, Bonn, Berlin, Rome and Brussels for a five week tour be hind the Iron Curtain. He went to Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Hungary and Poland to talk with top government officials, intellec- workers are expected to attend the kickoff meeting, noted Cam paign Chairman Bob Evans. Evans will be assisted in di recting this year’s campaign by Col. Walter H. Parsons Jr., who will head campus activities; J. E. Loupot, North Gate; Craig Clark, East Gate and Redmond Terrace areas; Sam Rizzo, Southside; Dr. Luther Jones, retired citizens; Taylor Riedel, teachers and other employees of the public schools, and Ben Jordan, federal em ployees. tuals, writers, students and com mon people in their villages and on their farms. Johnson was the only corre spondent to ever get into the town of Mlada Bolesia in Czech oslovakia, where a large Russian occupation troop garrison is sta tioned. Czechs have since at tacked the garrison, precipitating a new crisis and renewed censor ship impositions and the threat of a new invasion. He was recently awarded the coveted Sigma Delta Chi “Dis tinguished Service Award” for his coverage of national prob lems during 1968. He was cited for “capturing with realism the tone of events, including crisis, comedy, tragedy, triumph and up heaval of the nation in a rapidly changing world.” Special assignments correspon dent for the Washington Star, Johnson combines the fields of journalism and contemporary his tory for piercing analytic report ing of national and world situa tions. He has received the Pulitzer for distinguished national report ing marking the first time a fa ther and son have won the report ing prize in the 50-year history of the awards. His father, Mal colm Johnson, won the 1949 award for a newspaper series, “On the Waterfront,” basis for the Academy Award film. Filing for Offices Opens Wednesday Filing for the offices of Stu dent Senate vice president, soph omore College of Agriculture representative, and senior, jun ior, and sophomore College of Education representatives opens Wednesday and will remain open through Oct. 8, announced Mike Wiebe, Election Commission vice president for publicity. Wiebe said applications can be picked up at the Student Pro gram Office in the Memorial Stu dent Center and must be returned there before 5 p.m. Oct. 8. ‘New ’Peace Corps On Display Oct. 7 CS Chest Drive Opens at MSC The Life Style of a Mafioso—Part / Mafia Man ‘Just Another Businessman’ to Neighbors By Bernard Gavzer AP Newsfeatures Writer To his neighbors in the sea side town of Atlantic Highlands, N. J., Vito Genovese was just an other middle-aged businessman who lived in a modest bungalow with his wife, a son and daugh ter and an adopted daughter, and, like, many another resident, commuted each day to work in the caverns of Manhattan. When he walked the streets of the town no one noticed. “Mr. Genovese was a quiet gentleman and a perfect neigh bor,” said a teen-age girl who re membered him after his death. And there was the time another neighbor said: “He minded his own business.” FIRST BANK & TRUST—Home of the Super C D - 5% interest compounded daily. His business? Ruling a Mafia family. Genovese was considered one of the masterminds and archi tects of international narcotics traffic. His Mafia family—one of the five in New York — con ducted the usual lucrative activi ties of organized crime: gam bling, narcotics, vice, extortion, loan sharking, labor racketeer ing. Sometimes, murder was his business, too. But the public face he turned to the world was one of middle class respectability. It is also the pose and life style of all the other Mafia leaders, or Mafioso, who find middle class anonymity an important aid to the continu ing success of their private en deavors. The qualities that the Mafioso prize bear striking similarities to those valued by any suburban breadwinner; quiet neighborli ness; dignity and respect; the discharge of family responsibili ties; the education of children for work in the professions; resi dence in a decent, suburban set ting where the streets are safe and the schools good. Few if any of their children become hippies; none are known student activists, either lef£ wing or right; few are known as dope addicts. To all outward appearances the Mafioso have entered the mainstream of American life. But—only on the surface. For the Mafia — better known as La Cosa Nostra — the valued middle class virtues have a mir ror meaning. One is to be loyal and honest to the Mafia family and its lead ers, not to society at large. Re spect is won through terror and used to impose absolute loyalty to the codes of the Mafia, the word of Mafioso, not the codes of the nation. This inner life of the Mafia has been revealed piecemeal un til recent years. Joseph Valachi, the Mafia hoodlum with an in credible recollection of criminal activity and gang shop talk, was the first insider to provide de tails of that Mafia life style. He did so because of fear. He felt that Vito Genovese had marked him for death when both were in the federal penitentiary at At lanta. The most recent revelations have come from the voluminous Bryan Building & Loan Association. Your Sav ing Center, since 1919. BB&L. —Adv. transcripts, some 2,000 pages of conversations involving Samuel De Cavalcante, the reputed head of a New Jersey Mafia family. These were recorded by a hidden electronic device planted by the FBI. Speaking of the Mafia leaders, Col. Walter Stone, head of the Rhode Island State police and a veteran investigator of organ ized crime, says: “They think they can’t do any thing wrong. All of them con sider rules and the law as things which do not apply to them. When you say ‘murder’ it doesn’t come into their heads as it does into yours and mine. “They may be sending their kids to good schools and they may be pressing more conserva tively, and they may be tending to their gardens in nice little homes, but they are now and al ways have been animals.” The place the Mafioso lives can be deceptive. Raymond Pa- triarca of Providence, R. I., who now is in prison and who has been identified as the head of the Boston - Providence Mafia, resided in the still fashionable East Side section of Lancaster Ave. Genovese had his modest home market valued about $17,000 in 1963 on Highland Ave. in Atlan tic Highlands. Anthony Accardo, described by the Chicago Crime Commission as one of Chicago’s Mafia chieftains, long resided in River Forest, in a house that was built by its owner for $500,000. Quite a few of the New York leaders, including the late Albert Anastasia, had houses in the Ft. Lee, N.J., area, close by the gran deur of the Palisades. De Caval cante has a lovely ranch house in the Princeton, N. J., area. Living in such desirable sur roundings also brought another middle class responsibility which the Mafioso gladly assumed—in volvement in political and charit able events in which a needed dollar could be given so that the right people knew who gave it, even if it was anonymous. In the Mafia world, divorce is frowned upon as a threat to sta bility, not as a sign of moral weakness. It is also viewed as a possible danger in giving the out side world information which the Mafia wants to keep secret. (Tomorrow: Part II—The dan gers of divorce for Mafioso mem bers.) University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv.