Page 10 THE BATTALION MONDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1979 UT in U.S. prof says date rebels to 1740s What did Jonathan Edwards, the Puritan minister of the 1700s, have in common with a hippie of the 1960s? Dr. Jonathan Moreno, pro fessor of philosophy at the Univer sity of Texas at Austin, says both went “against the grain” of the fabric of accepted American culture. Moreno presented a paper entitled “Against the Grain: Counter-Cultures in America” in t Rudder Tower Thursday, sponsored by the Department of Philosophy at Texas A&M University. About 20 people heard Moreno trace the history of counter-culture movements in America from the early colonial settlers to today. Moreno likened culture to “the fabric of a piece of wood” whose pat terns and textures are formed of the characteristics of the experiences of a particular people in a particular environment. A culture can survive only if succeeding generations can “renew” these characteristic standards to fit the changes they ex perience, Moreno said. In other words, American culture is the result of the unique experi ences of a people in a new land. This culture exists today because of the renewal of the American ideal of the frontier, in time, if not in space. Within the fabric of culture, there are those who go against the grain; these are the counter-cultures, Moreno said. “To be a counter-culture in America is, broadly speaking, to take exception to the standard no tion of renewal (of the characteris tics of culture),” Moreno said. “No history of culture is complete with out a history of counter-cultures.” Brazos Valley WORLD OF BOOKS Shoppe, Inc. 3 volume set containing the complete works of Shakespeare with illustrations. Reg. 60.00 NOW 45°° Culpepper Plaza 10-8 Mon. & Thurs. 10-6 Tues., Wed.. Fri.. Sat. 693-2676 Townshire Shopping Center 9:30-6 Mon.-Sat. 779-2636 Moreno said that the accepted form of renewal has been a physical change, characterized by slogans like “Go west, young man” and ad ventures like the space program of the late 1960s. Often the counter cultures’ forms of renewal have been a temporal frontier, charac terized by Edwards’ religious ex periences and the drug trips of the hippies, Moreno said. A&M to in Saudi aid firm project By BONNIE HELWIG Battalion Reporter Saudi Arabia hopes to develop an agricultural research and extej sion service system similar to the one in Texas, and Texas Aid! University may help establish it. Texas A&M and the 3/D International corporation have agreedk cooperate on international projects, says Dr. Terry Greathouse,it sociate vice president for agriculture and renewable resources aiK coordinator of the University’s international affairs.“This concepl cooperation between a university and a company is very new. Infatt this is the only joint effort of this kind I know of,” Greathouse said The first proposed project is the one in Saudi Arabia. “They (the Saudi officials) want to build an extensive system there is nothing now, so the project will include planning and ing the facilities, providing housing, training the personnel and esl lishing research programs,” he said. “3D/I manages very large projects in the Middle East and we quite visible there,” said Stanley Smith, vice president of 3D/Inlei. national. “A proposed project such as this one would deal mainly with engineering and project management. We would pool our sei with A&M for the best results,” Smith said. Greathouse said, “We can take advantage of 3D/I’s experieml from this standpoint and let them do the ‘brick and mortar’worlfel “It is evident that no counter culture has filled the vacuum left by the passage of the sixties,” Moreno said. Petition lost, hut attention gained Moreno concluded that American counter-culture movements were seeking some form of “community,” with a moral climate that accounted for the well-being of everyone. This, Moreno said, has been partially realized in the civil rights and the feminist movements. Because of this, the counter-cultures in Ameri can culture may be “drawing to a close.” Jeff Bogert, a sophomore nuclear engineering major, ex plains to some cadets that his petition favors memorializing the grass around the Memorial Student Center — but objects to spending $25,000 for a hedge to protect the grass. The petition called for a referendum to let the student body vote on whether hedges should be planted around the grass. The petition was turned in to Bobby Tucker, student body presi dent, Friday afternoon. He said fewer than 1,500 students signed the petition — less than the 10 percent of the student body needed to call a referendum. So a student vote is not possible. He noted, however, that administrators are aware of the petition and the sentiment behind it. They will consider For Your Class Formal Let Welch’s make it fit Impress that certain someone, let the professionals at Welch’s cleaners do your alterations, fast - courteous service the matter further, he said. Battalion photo by Lynn Blanco “We are interested in this from an academic standpoint,' he “We provide the technical information for the project once it isestalt lished while 3D/I provides the framework for it.” Morris Bloodworth, head of the soil and crop sciences departmeiil has already met with key Saudi officals, and Greathouse said tk Texas A&M staff will be going to Saudi Arabia to evaluate thepw posed project. “We become involved in these activities for our own benefitaswel as the country involved,” Greathouse said. “We participate in international projects that are compatible will our in-state research programs because we want to gain informA that will apply to this area as well as to the other countries." Smith said he hoped 3D/International and Texas A&M wouldl* able to work on other projects, possibly in Texas A&M’s otherareastl study, such as engineering or medicine. Texas A&M is presently participating in projects in Guatemali Columbia and Uruguay in Central and South America, and Malian Tanzania in Africa. Inly drr re now i jtion Ei jises for a sui * WELCH'S CLEANERS Town & Country Shopping Center 3819 E. 29th The films of Gerard Malanga Feb. 12, 8:00 Rudder Auditorium p.m. Gerard Malanga This special film program consists of 3 avant-garde films: Vision (1976) 34 min., April Diary (1970) and an excerpt from Four Stars (1967) 35 min. 31 min., a film by Andy Warhol. These films are not available for commercial distribution and are, therefore, unrated. Blizzard of 79 celebrated in 72-ton snowsculpture one United Press International SYCAMORE, Ill. — L.W. Bute says he found something construc tive to do with 72 tons of snow — remnants of the Blizzard of ’79. Bute engineered “Mount Syca more, a 20-foot-high snow sculpture which stands in silent commemoration of four local dig- nataries and this year’s record snows. Bute and two fellow artists, Doug Aken and David Stott, challenged sub-zero temperatures last weekend to mold the structure from 30-inch snows which covered the city’s cour thouse lawn. Nature also helped create the sculpture — and proba bly will be the main cause of its de struction. “I know it’s not permanent,” said Bute, a 33-year-old body and fender mechanic. “But with the cold weather, it’s kind of hard to say how long it will last. That’s all part of it — the fact that it’s temporary.” The three men worked for 36 hours during a three-day period to mold the sculpture, which portrays Mayor Harold “Red Johnson, former police chief'Joseph Salemi, retired art teacher Cora Minor and Bute himself. Johnson and Salemi were chosen as subjects because they are “com munity characters,” Bute said. Miss Miner, 90, who still gives private art lessons, was Bute’s “inspiration” and former art teacher. And the final character — Bute himself — was Bute’s method of signing the piece. The three artists first cleared the courthouse lawn of snow, then built a scaffold and covered it with a ce ment platform. They used a snowblower to fill the platform with snow. Then the three began sculpting, using chisels, draw blades and spade-like shovels, working from clay models provided by Bute. Eye glasses later were constructedl steel rods and added to Job j’, snow-shaped likeness. Bute has made one sculpture a year for the townJ the last five years. This year.n snows have made him productive. In addition to ’ Sycamore,” he’s created Mil Mouse — standing since New! | because of freezing temperatu During the 23 years hesli molding characters from snow,! also sculpted W.C. Fields,! Claus and the Statue of Libert “For the Statue of Liberty wt tna,K ' < to bring in some additional sn * Bute said of the structure, * commemorated the Bicenten he ' )r< “But this year we just usedthei P airs - that was there.” (saklt led br That finally amounted to72l|of the Bute figures. 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