Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, October 7, 1969 THE BATTALION 25 New ‘Buffos’ Selected To Join Singing Cadets For National SDS Leadership It’s ‘Weatherman’ vs. RYM I The Singing Cadets accepted 25 new members into its 59-voice ranks for 1969-70. The 25 “buffos” will first ap pear publicly with the all-male glee club Nov. 15 on CBS-TV’s Miss Teenage America Pageant in Fort Worth. Director Robert L. (Bob) Boone indicated the new singing Cadets are a “good group.” “We auditioned 129,” he said. “Among those who didn’t make it were 30 we would ordinarily have welcomed. The qulality of our new members keeps going up and up and up. Their musi cianship is great.” Boone noted the buffos (a bor rowed term applied opera’s com edy voices) began rehearsing with the Singing Cadets last week. New members remain buf fos and wear the organization’s key around their necks until the end of the fall semester or the Cadets’ first appearance. New members are Fred C. Campbell, President's Scholar and pre-med major, and Terry L. BUSIER AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.H.A.—Veterans and Conventional Loans ARM & HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. 3523 Texas Ave. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708 AGGIES Come in five or more in one car. The driver of the car eats free. Any of our Mexican plates. The driver must bring this ad with him. We have the best in Mexican Food. L. EL TORO RESTAURANT 500 N. Sims & 22nd Bryan, Texas Hours 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. — 5 p. m. to 10 p. m. 7 days a week I McClellan, finance major of San Antonio; Kelly F. Clements, sophomore, electrical engineer ing, Shamrock; Robert T. Coop er, freshman, math, Gary L. Powell, freshman, education and James R. Goodbar, freshman wildlife science, Dallas; Harvey H. Dayton, soph, pre-med, Col umbus, Ga.; Rex G. Dean, chem istry graduate student, Lometa; William W. Graham, physics junior, Brady; Dan O. Harper, freshman, electrical engineering; Longview; Charles G. Harris, pre-vet freshman, Austin; Wil liam B. Hoover, aero engineer ing freshman, Milwaukee, Wis.; Frederick B. Jackson, pre-med freshman, Corpus Christi. Also, Andrew D. Jordan, pre- med freshman, John E. Turner, mechanical engineering fresh man, and Cecil E. Wells Jr., zo ology freshman, of Houston; Mark S. Kidd, pre-med fresh man, Harlingen; Carroll G. Mac- lin, freshman, wildlife science, Jasper; C. Miles Massie, fresh man, psychology, Westminster, Md.; Carey S. McConnell, fresh man, marine engineering, Baton Rouge, La.; Charles E. Mitchell, freshman, pre-med, Clear Lake City; Robert P. Pitts, manage ment junior, Brownwood; Emer son L. Porter, pre-med junior, Odessa; James L. Randolph, freshman, poultry science, Wick- ett , and Ronald L. Warren, freshman, pre-dent, Refugio. CHICAGO (A>) — Two con tending wings within the tem pest-tossed Students for a Dem ocratic Society are heading for a confrontation that could leave the nation’s major radical youth organization in shambles. “Very soon, the only active people left in SDS will be FBI agents,” said one radical who, like many others, fears the im pending showdown could result in the demise of both factions. The two factions — “The Weatherman” and the Revolu tionary Youth Movement II — are planning a series of compet ing demonstrations beginning Wednesday in this city which has become a radical focal point because of the federal conspira cy trial of eight movement lead ers. The charges stem from the violence accompanying last year’s Democratic National Convention. At stake in the showdown is prestige — something both fac tions need if they are to build a following among unaligned radi cals on the nation’s campuses. A resounding failure could be fatal to organizing efforts — particularly for the Weatherman faction, which takes its name from a Bob Dylan song line “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.” Weatherman currently controls the SDS National Office here. It has tightened security and taken tentative steps toward building revolutionary cadres, or leader ship cells. “They are developing a hard IlSlSSi Vy' X 1 f* 4 .' ' X- i S:- :\ I A -X A ■ ^ *«> : X V ; fr ^y. £ . - ? . . . jr % X X/' ■ \l ; I **"“*•'• \ \ " V X, '- N X: V \ Venture: ■ ■ ■ a I f-' ~ 4 iiliiiiliii: V:' ‘ Use a love call to count bacteria. The /ampyridae beetle family. Delight of small boys. Biological light bulb. And prime source of raw material for another Du Pont innovation. Luciferase, an enzymatic protein with intriguing properties, obtain able only from fireflies. Luciferin, an organic molecule also found in fireflies, but synthesizable. Adeno sine triphosphate (ATP), a common energy-yielding substance found in all living cells. Those are the three main ingre dients in iampyridae’s love light. And because ATP is common to all living cells, university researchers discovered they could produce an artificial glow by mixing luciferin and luciferase wherever life is present. Noting that phenomenon, Du Pont scientists and engineers went on to develop it into a practical ana lytical system. Correlating the in tensity of the artificial “glow” with the amount of ATP present in bacteria, they designed a means of measuring the reaction. The result is the luminescence biometer—the first really basic im provement in bacteria-co^riting methods since the time of Louis Pasteur. Rather than waiting days for a culture to demonstrate growth density, a doctor or technician can now get a digital readout of bacteria concentration in a matterof minutes. Other potentially lifesaving uses for the biometer are being sug gested every day—such as diagnos ing metabolic rates, enzyme de ficiencies and nerve damage. Innovation—applying the known to discover the unknown, inventing new materials and putting them to work, using research and engineer ing to create the ideas and products of the future—this is the venture Du Pont people are engaged in. You can become one of them, and advance professionally in your chosen field. See your Du Pont Recruiter. Or send us the coupon. Du Pont Company Room 7890, Wilmington, DE 19898 I'd like your latest information on opportunities at Du Pont for graduates with degrees in Name_ University- Degree -Graduation Date_ An Equal Opportunity Employer (M/F) ctUPfflJ) Ventures for better living. ening c a d r e,” a government source said. “It’s not too far advanced right now, but there are signs it’s on the way.” Cadres, internal security and secrecy fly in the face of the still-dominant impulses within the radical youth movement, which long has taken pride in its unstructured manner. So does the hint of escalated violence implicit in Weather man’s Chicago slogan, “Bring the War Home.” The West Coast-based RYM II — pronounced rim-two — has adopted the slogan, “Get the U.S. Out of Vietnam Now,” for its Chicago demonstrations. “It’s a power struggle to see which group can survive,” said a worker for the “Conspiracy,” an organization seeking to co ordinate the assorted protests accompanying the Chicago con spiracy trial. Weatherman has been prepar ing for months for the Chicago demonstrations. “The action is probably going to make them or break them,” said one source close to this faction. “After Chi cago, it could be all over for them.” RYM II, in contrast, is making a late entry. If its efforts fiz zle, the faction likely will blame lack of preparation time. Weatherman is planning a ral ly in Lincoln Park — one of the battlegrounds during the Demo cratic convention. It also is call- Jy Rich a. c alior * schools, a rock-music fe$titP a ^ ^ ■* ing for demonstrations in I and a march and rally at theMf Texa s eral court house. RninW* kt a fea'v* Vail ichie : < -t Railroad Objects to Students Parking on Property by FM2154 Railroad officials have notified Campus Security they object to vehicles being parked on rail road property along FM 2154 on the west side of the campus. Campus Security Chief Ed Powell said a spokesman for the railroads warned that the ve hicles may be towed away. Powell said the spokesman in dicated the lines were concerned that some of the cars might get too close to the tracks. He noted the cars also could obstruct oc casional unloading operations in the area. Many of the automobiles parked on the railroad property have not been registered for the current school year but appar ently belong to student or uni versity employes, the chief ob served. He pointed out university parking is available in the same general area. The track along FM 2154 is used by several railroads. WEATHER Wednesday — Partly cloudy to cloudy. Wind Easterly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 77, low 57. Thursday—Partly cloudy. Wind Easterly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 77, low 62. RYM IPs schedule is getfl.. more to working class and* white neighborhoods, but itiF ves ° calls for a high school boycolJ demonstration outside a CliitL factory, street rallies and a Jr . 011 ^ test against hospital con( l' t ®" ^ j 4 Weatherman combined Hi ist-Leninism with what onem^gg cal writer described as “anff ^ ^ archist, street-people life i*n ess a dope-smoking, hip-radical." ■ In its literature, Weath ,f A&M s>-* advocates allowing theory toLt sou tin velop through action. ThatBays g'ea preach puts it on a colliM^ a course with RYM II, whicliM m sor> ] Weatherman “adventurist" Why, asked RYM II in il footba 1 ] cent publication, hadn’t WaMught tti erman tried to muster theBgh, serx- port of Negro, Latin Amttft-khorse and working-class organizaiBnted fox- for its Chicago national a(*himselt To RYM II the answerwaiBfty Self vious. All Weatherman nft to do, it said, is stage a " action” simply to denua that there are “whites fflij que ^tly- enough to taunt the pip|i mmag - e lice)” and “to increase theAj and < of militancy in the white ment.” “They have counterposedl goal to that of building a■ 1 demonstration which conliil volve thousands of workinji WAT^ r pie, including black and hLe day . If. elf slxo^ dr his fix working people. “To abandon the Lubbock—Partly cloudy. Wind Westerly 15 to 20 m.p.h. 70°. national tion to the Weatherman tl have made us scabs on the! namese and would have a dismal turnout.” per \v' c » * Min inr Cla: SOt?’ x I p.m. da. Ttreston* DELUXE CHAMPION fse For [ Riding. Cj ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT J8. GTO, bu friiiK, vir ■ $2550. vir»y I OUR BEST-SELLING REPLACEMENT TIRE . Deluxe Cfcemploii* Will I assuring later delivery at the advertised price. 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