ill THE BATTALION Page 2 College Station, Texas Tuesday, March 9, 1971 CADET SLOUCH by Jim Earle “Looks like a good day to get some sun, but I’ll be ready for anything!” New safety devices required by 1974 WASHINGTON >_The De partment of Transportation has ordered auto makers to install automatic safety devices in the front passenger compartment of all 1974 model cars, and in rear seats by 1976. In its final ruling Friday on passive restraint systems—adap ted because not enough Americans use seat belts—the department told the manufacturers they must keep passengers from from injury in a head-on crash with a wall at speeds of up to 30 miles per hour. The four major U. S. auto pro- ducers had no immediate com ment on the ruling. They had requested two more years to de sign the safety systems. The announcement by Secre tary of Transportation John A. Volpe marks the end of several years of private and public spar ring on the issue between govern ment and industry. The order applies to all new cars, foreign and domestic, sold in the United States. The ruling requires also im proved, roll-up belt systems—with a dashboard light and buzzer that signals when front seat occupants have not buckled up—to be in stalled on autos produced after Jan. 1, 1972. Volpe acknowledged the design problems by applying the passive restraint order to 1974 and 1976 models, a year later in each case than previously proposed. “This delay in requiring com plete passive protection has been found necessary because of the difficulty the industry will have in designing their vehicles to meet the new tests for passive protection in angular, lateral and rollover collisions,” he said. tonight on the tube Numbers in () denote channels 6:00 3 (5) Evening News on th< ; cable. 6:30 3 (5) Beverly Hillbillies 2:30 3 (5) Edge of Night 15 (12) Campus and 15 (12) Sesame Street Community Today (PBS) Repeat of 7:00 3 (5) Green Acres Monday) 15 (12) Know Your 3:00 3 (5) Corner Pyle Antiques (ETS) 3:30 3 (5) Town Talk 7:30 3 (5) Hee Haw 15 (12) University 15 (12) Realities (NET) Instructional 8:30 3 (5) All in the Family 4:00 3 (5) That Girl 15 (12) Viewpoint 4:30 3 (5) Bewitched 9:00 3 (5) Marcus Welby, 15 (12) What’s New MD (NET) 15 (12) Because We Care 5:00 3 (5) General Hospital (PBS) 15 (12) Misterogers’ 9:30 15 (12) Hollywood Neighborhood Television (NET) Theatre (PBS) 5:30 3 (5) CBS News 10:00 3 (5) Final News 15 (12) Sesame Street 10:30 3 (5) Movie—River of (PMS) Gold Bingo—Weekdays at buy. You need not 5, be BCS*TV/9. present to Nothing to win. (WE CARE) Amigos De Las Americas Student Orientated Volunteer Organization wants you to work in Central America this summer! Interested? Thursday March 11, 7:30 p. m. Room 2A. MSC. (Project of MSC Travel Committee) Court says obiections Bulletin Board J J TONIGHT Junior Class Council wil must apply to all wars IE BAT WASHINGTON UP)_The Su preme Court barred Monday draft exceptions for men who claim conscientious objections to the Indochina war but not to all wars. The 8-1 ruling, based on what Justice Thurgood Marshall called a straightforward reading of Selective Service law, closes the door on Roman Catholics who subscribe to the “just war” doc trine as well as to other selective objectors. Marshall said they are subject to the draft, however sincere or religious they may be. He said Congress intended to exempt only persons who oppose participat ing in all war. Justice William O. Douglas dissented. He said the exemp tion provision is unconsitutional in that it discriminates in favor of religious persons and against humanists and atheists with sim ilar scruples against war. The decision upheld the con viction of Guy P. Gillette, 26, of Yonkers, N. Y., a self-described humanist who said he would help defend the country or fight in a United Nations peace-keeping ef fort but not in Vietnam. At the same time, the court ruled against Louis A. Negre, 23, of Bakersfield, Calif., a Roman Catholic who was refused a dis charge from the Army. After completing infantry training Negre declared his participation in the Vietnam war would contra dict “all that I had been taught in my religious training.” Both men said the war is un just and the court did not ques tion their sincerity. Marshall, delivering the court’s opinion in both cases, said “We hold that Congress intended to exempt persons who oppose par ticipating in all war . . . and that persons who object solely to par ticipation in a particular war not within the purview of the ex empting section . . .” A Justice Department source said the ruling opens the way for the government to seek indict ments against several alleged draft evaders who have raised similar arguments. In a second major ruling the court prohibited employers from using job tests that do not really measure a man’s qualifications but serve to block Negroes from promotions. The 8-0 decision, given by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, said Title VII of the 1964 federal civil rights law prohibits all employ ment practices that operate to exclude Negroes and cannot be shown to be related to job per formance. Jack Greenberg of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, announced that civil rights lawyers will invoke the ruling in behalf of thousands of workers who claim to have been denied jobs or promotions because of such tests. The Fund carried the issue to the court for a group of Negro workers at the Duke Power Co. generating plant at Draper, N.C., who said they were frozen into lower-paid jobs by requirements that they either pass two intel ligence tests or obtain a high school diploma. Burger said the court was not charging the company with dis crimination. However, he said, the 1964 law “proscribes not only overt discrimination but also practices that are fair in form, but discriminatory in operation.” ALLEN OLDS. - CAD. INCORPORATED SALES - SERVICE ‘Where satisfaction is standard equipment” 2400 Texas Ave. Cbe Battalion Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those oj the student writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax- supported, non-projit, self-supporting educational enter prise edited and operated by students as a university and community newspaper. The lished Battalion, lollese Station, Texas, di ly, and holiday periods, Sep May, and once a week during summer school, jblished in College Stati jnday, Monday, and ho! student newspaper at as, daily periods, on, ilida; Texas A&M, is y except Saturday, September through LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor must be typed, double-spaced, and no more than 300 words in length. They must be signed, although the writer’s name will be withheld by arrangement with the editor. Address correspondence to Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station, Texas 77843. MEMBER The Associated Press, Texas Press Association The Associated Collegiate Press Mail subscriptions are $3.50 ions 11 y sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on The Battalion, Room 217, Services Buildir Texas 77843. •; $6.50 per full year. All Advertis* ing. College Station, eproduction of all ne- therwise credited in th< the it Members of the Student Publications Board are: chairman; H. F. F 5 ’— 1 College of Engin liege of veterinary Medicine; of Agriculture; and Roger Miller, student. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for dispa • a :s ter herein are also reserved. Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas. erw: origin pul matter he: cred blish patches credited to it or not paper and local news of spontaneoi ed herein. Rights of republication of all othi are also reserved. Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising vices, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San F rancisco. Servic EDITOR DAVID MIDDLEBROOKE Assistant Editor Hayden Whitsett Managing Editor Fran Zupan Women’s Editor Sue Davis Sports Editor Clifford Broyles mmm The ruling was the first by the court to interpret Title VII. The U.S. Circuit Court in Rich mond, Va., had ruled that the Ne groes would have to prove the company was practicing racial discrimination in order to invali date the tests and diploma re quirements. In a third ruling the court tied 4 to 4 and thereby upheld a ban in Maryland on public showing of the movie, “I Am Curious Yel low.” The justices said nothing about the issues involved. Grove Press Inc., the importer and owner of American distribu tion rights to the Swedish film, had challenged Maryland’s movie censorship law and asked the court to rule that no movie may be put off-limits for adults. Francis B. Burch, Maryland attorney general, argued that each state should be free to de cide which films are to be banned. The tie vote was produced by the self-disqualification of Jus tice William O. Douglas. The president of Grove Press, Barney Rossett, publishes the Evergreen Review, the magazine that print ed excerpts from Douglas’ latest book. The tie vote and absence of an accompanying opinion left in force the court’s current stand ard on obscenity. In other actions the court: Agreed to hear an appeal by Francis Haines, a 69-year-old prisoner in Illinois who chal lenges the authority of officials to consign prisoners to solitary confinement. —Granted a hearing to John Adams, a Chicago man convict ed of an unlawful narcotics sale, who is seeking to expand the right of defendants to have law yers at preliminary hearings. TONIGHT Texas A&M Collegiate FFA will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Chemistry Building. Dairy Science Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the Heep Building. Ag Eco Club wil meet at 7:30 p. m. in room 112-113 of the Plant Sciences Building. TAMMBA will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Building E. Society for the Advancement of Management will meet at 7:30 p.m .at Ralph's Pizza at Eastgate to elect officers. WEDNESDAY Intervarsity Christian Fellow ship will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 304 of the Physics Building. Aggie Wives Bridge Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 2B of the MSC. Sailing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 106 of the Geology Building. Junior Class Council willi at 7:30 p.m. in room 113off Hall. THURSDAY Model Airplane Club will i at 8:15 p.m. in room 202 oin Physics Building to discuss n for the April meet. Chemical Engineers Wives(1 will meet at 7:30 p.m. home of Mrs. Ron Darby, | Center Creek Pkwy. in Br] hear a representative from 1 Norman speak. Host and Fashion Maiti'ii will meet at 6:30 p.m. at( Ball’s, 3905-A Aspen to pn for the women’s fashion shdjj] Pecan Valley Hometown! will meet at 8 p. m. in rooid of the MSC to hear a speaker^ plan the Easter party. ll TRY BATTALION CLASS! Hunt for Playmates involves almost ‘x-ray’ scanning of field In search of future Playmates, Playboy magazine photographers are roaming beaches, watching high school graduations, and even attending weddings, where they scan, with something approaching X-ray vision, not only brides maids but also brides themselves. This network of professional peepers is generally looking for “virginal quality,” buxom types no younger than 18 and no older than 21, according to Thomas Meehan, who offers a rare inside study of “The “Playmate Proc ess’ in the premier issue of Audi ence, a new hard-cover magazine published in Boston. Finding girls who are willing to be Playmates isn’t at all difficult, Meehan writes. Those chosen are paid $5,000, and a Playboy pho tographer is quoted as saying, “You have to fight them off with a baseball bat.” Photo submissions from ama teurs, in fact, have proliferated since the advent of the color Po laroid camera. Boy friends and husbands are now flooding the Playboy offices with nude photos of their lady loves that for some quirky reason they wish to have the whole nation view. The actual process of producing a Playmate gatefold — “the fold, he’s a perfectionist.” “Most of the Playmates,” Mee han writes, “seem to have done little of public interest in their entire lives,” a fact that can drive the writers of the accompanying stories about them “to climbing walls.” Playboy’s managing edi tor told Meehan that he rotates the writing assignment to save wear and tear on his staff. As to the Playmates them selves, Meehan’s interview with last year’s Miss December, Carol Imhof, who’s a Playboy Bunny in Chicago, turned up the point that she “never looks at a news paper . . . too depressing.” Nei ther her boy friend nor her moth er went for the idea of her pos ing nude, and she didn’t tell her father beforehand. Unlike most Playmates, how ever, Miss Imhof used her real name, the article says. Moreover, with very few exceptions, most Playmates of the Month drop swiftly back into their former obscurity. “Many of them today are plump housewives with chil dren, Excedrin headaches, and worries about whether their wash is getting white enough,” Mee han asserts. girl with the staple in her navel,” as Meehan puts it—costs upward of $20,000, the Audience article notes. A time-consuming procedure comprising thousands of studio shots as well as rather extensive and tricky lithographic work is involved. Hugh Hefner, Playboy’s publisher, is alo heavily involved, issuing such instructions to the reproducing technicians as “Take off the hair on her upper lip,” or “Clean up the shadows around her underarms.” The article quotes the lithographer on Hef ner: “When it comes to the gate- NEED CASH? We loan money on any item of value. No credit record required. LOANS ON Your guitar & Amp., TV, golf clubs, radios, guns, record players, diamonds, tools, sports equipment, tape decks, watches. WE WANT TO BUY YOUR 8 TRACK TAPES AND ANY OTHER ITEM OF VALUE. TEXAS STATE CREDIT CO. 1014 Texas Ave. — Bryan Weingarten Center And he adds that many of them are relieved that, like most Play mates, they didn’t use their real names in Playboy. Our Talk With Gordon Richardson Provident Mutual Pro Texas A&M 707 University Drive Financial insecurity is a monster. We can help you blunt its fangs. We have a specially designed insurance program that gives you a solid financial foundation created with you in mind. If you invest now, it will cost less . . . and the more security you’ll be building. Talk with us today. Call or stop by our campus office. The bogeymen will never get you PROVIDENT MUTUAL =fi=== LIFE I 1 INSURANCE COMPANY OF. PHILADELPHIA Fror . , Fear is a bogeyman lirector. TAMU Town Hall — Artist Show Case Presents ANSHEL BRUSILOW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND CONDUCTOR % V G. ROLLIE WHITE COLISEUM Tuesday, March 9, 1971 — 8:00 p.m. HEAR A GREAT PROGRAM WHICH INCLUDES MUSIC BY STRAUSS, DVORAK, BIZET AND BORODIN 1 Town Hall Season Ticket Holders and A&M Activity Card Holders FREE A&M Student Date $1.00 Other Students $1.50 Patrons $3.00 V- f 4 3523 :00 p. m., A will ill not THE G1 Inal Examine lame: Baker •wee: Ph.E lissertation: STATE ATI ime: March Room Bldir. George Dean of The English Hired of ji najoring in larch 10, 197 1 the Chemis- onault notic« luilding for c Wynken, B] IH?K* for a Ms Playla 181 Now ope tions for and older Call 822-i State lie —E We stock Where h Quanl Wheel ] Syste Watei Almost 2c Rrake 2 w