A movement for humanity ""HEN THE HISTORY of our generation is set down in textbooks for the bore- dom of future college students it will tell a story of movements. The students will scribble the word "movements" in the margins of books and they will underline it in their class notes the night before mid- terms. The better students may even be able to regurgitate the issues of the move- ments and their outcomes, but everyone will be able to typify the period in a single word. We all know about the age of reason although few of us would be able to say much about who was being reasonable about what. This time of ours has witnessed many movements, as those future students will recall. The first one to which the term was applied had something to do with civil rights and happened in a part of the coun- try known as the South. That movement, as it spread from the lunch counters and the buses of the South to the ghettoes of the North, laid the groundwork for the period of movements which has followed. FROM THE civil rights movement grew many of the tactics of later movements. The sit-ins, protest marches and civil dis- obedience ranging from confrontation to undirected violence which are a part of the movements of this time all descended from the civil rights movement. From that primal movement grew ideals and goals as well. The movements this generation has seen have been directed toward the individual human rights and needs of people this world has chosen either to ignore or to destroy. Today another of the movements of our time will reach a new height of expression in its search for fruition. Today new voices and old, in greater numbers than ever be- fore, will be raised against a faraway war and a President who has vowed he will never hear them. ('ENTERING AROUND the war is the movement which will probably be best remembered. It was the movement that toppled a president and shook the politics of a nation. But beyond the politics we may hope someone will recall our striving for the humanity of man. -TIIE EDITORIAL DIRECTORS :; , < ; s < t :'' .. ?: Ljl . ' f ? . . ,~ : ___. Lette Life or death? To the Editor: WE HAVE CONSTITUTED an Ad Hoc Committee to express the support of many students a n d faculty in the School of Natural Resources for the national mora- torium. Today many SNR faculty will hold discussions of resources and environmental problems relevant to the war in place of their regu- lar classes. T h e s e sessions (ex- ample: "Ecological Effects of De- foliation in Viet Nam") will be open to the public and the full schedule is posted throughout the Natural Resources Building. We call upon our colleagues to demonstrate their concern by par- ticipating in these constructive discussions as alternatives to their regular activities. We also ask all to join in University-wide mora- torium events, a n d particularly the 6:00 p.m. march and stadium rally. Think for a moment h o w we might have used the wasted hun- dreds of billions of dollars and the wasted 45,000 y o u n g men's lives as funding and manpower to really attack the problems of an outraged world environment and rs to the Editor -John P. Clark -James Wander -John R. Luton -James Garry -Tim Stewart -Gary A. Simmons -John Blake -Richard Botzler -Nancy Boyer -Ronald G. Tozer -Bill Bryan, Jr. -Arthur Hanson -Ned Ives -Terry L. Sharik -Douglas Stone Oct. 13 1thletes fopr eace To the Editor: IN THE PAST, athletes have functioned as a conservative or perhaps even an apolitical group, that were reluctant to voice their opinions on issues outside the sports realm. We can remain silent no longer. The issues of today have a tremendous effect upon every individual regardless of his interests We. the undersigned, whole- heartedly are in favor of, and give support to the Oct. 15 National Moratorium. "TIMES UP" THU rVARfiiV Vr 1*,*%t. to clear up a possible misunder- standing regarding our relation- ship to the Oct. 15 moratorium. A simple reading of the resolution passed by our club and reported in The Daily (Oct. 11) will show: That we did not say we oppose the moratorium, as The Daily article indicated (some of us do, others don't> That we did not say we oppose the strike- (again, some of us will attend classes, others will strike); But that we did say we opposed classes being called off and not being rescheduled. That it is a matter of immediate tactics and not one of long-range goals as indicated by a resolution passed three weeks ago by the College Republicans calling for the "total de-Americanization of the war" by the end of 1970. -Brad Ginter, Member, College Republican Executive Board Oct. 13 To the Editor: IN THE OCT. 10 Daily I am repo ted as chairing a program on O-1. 15 on the subject of "The Viwtnam P" ofiteers and Who Foots