Commission patrols liquor scene in 14 counties By JACK HODGES Staff Writer The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (ABC) has been assist ing local police for nearly nine years watching clubs and bars to prevent fights or violations of beverages IS p ernl ^ s ’ “We are not here to harass or ar rest people but to keep the clubs safe, Assistant Supervisor James Bundren said. “We advise club owners if there is going to be trouble and often they call us for advice if trouble arises.” The ABC has plainclothes men who regularly attend the Midnight Yell Practices to catch those who bring beer into the stadium. “There has been no occasion when someone had to be taken to jail but we would if we had to, Bundren said. The ABC has a staff of seven men and they check bars in a 14-county area about twice a month to make sure the permits have not expired and if the liquor specified in the permit is being sold. If the permits are violated, or trouble gets out of hand, the clubs can be closed and people involved arrested. Often the owners can stop trouble before it starts, said Bundren. The ABC sells permits to the clubs and each one has specific re strictions. Some clubs can sell beer or hard liquor and the alcoholic con tent is specified on each permit. Last year the ABC received al most $120 million from liquor per mits. These funds went to public education and schools for the blind and deaf. The Commission was a little wor ried when the 18-year-old drinking right was established, Bundren said, but their purchase right has brought more money into the state. There has been no added trouble, he said. “It has really helped here because the older people who have been through World War II feel they can fight anyone. We have a lot of stu dents here that do not feel that way and who are responsible citizens.” Today in the Batt NSL P-4 Speaker p- 5 Batt production . .p. 6 Cbe Battalion Weather Mostly cloudy and mild Wednesday with 20% chance of rain today and tomorrow. High both days mid-SO’s. Low tonite 65°. Vol. 68 No. 30 College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 23, 1974 Teto-proof Congress dangerous, says Ford OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. j(AP)—President Ford, campaign- | ing through the M idwest to ward off [predicted major Democratic con- Ipssional gains, said Tuesday that [if we get the wrong kind of Con gress, peace could be in jeopardy.” It was the first time Ford has linked the outcome of next month’s | elections to the nation’s foreign pol- The new tact in his effort to ward off what he calls “a veto-proof Con gress came as an extemporaneous addition to the prepared text of an address to a Republican rally at an Oklahoma City convention center. Before thp rally, the President told cattlemen he is leaning toward curbing dairy imports but sidestep ped the question of restraints on beef imports. Ford voiced “concern about the breech in the bipartisanship” of the nation’s foreign policy and called for the election of congressmen who are “far-sighted, visionary, imagina tive, cooperative ... so we can have peace abroad and so we can work on our problems at home.” A private meeting with cattlemen was sandwiched between a pair of Oklahoma City speeches to boost Muskie calls for bargaining to hold down wages, prices WASHINGTON (AP) — Speak ing for congressional Democrats, Sen. EdmundS. Muskie, D-Maine, urged President Ford Tuesday night to use his jawboning powers to dampen wage and price increases. If jawboning and other bargaining j efforts fail, Muskie said, “mandat- I ory action must be taken. ” Muskie also said that business must share the sacrifices required to fight inflation and boost the economy. In a speech prepared for broad cast on NBC-TV in response to Fords address to a Future Farmers ; of America convention last week, Muskie said: If the President wants Ameri cans to eat less, drive less and de mand less, he should he prepared to ask some of them to charge less. ” His speech came a few hours after the government reported that rising prices for food, clothing and mort gage rates pushed the cost of living u p another 1.2 per cent in Sep tember, making the last 12 months the worst inflationary surge since 1947. Prices in September were re ported 12.1 per cent higher than a year earlier. Muskie, chairman of the Senate udget Committee, said Ford should do some hard bargaining — to dampen price and wage in creases that are about to occur.” The roll-back on automobile Price increases was a small but worthy start, he said, referring to Ford’s criticism that preceded Gen eral Motors reduction of its 1975 price hikes. Muskie urged the Federal Re serve Board to ease its tight-money policy so as to assure a flow of credit at reasonable rates to the housing industry and small business. Instead of Ford’s proposed 5-per-cent tax surcharge on middle and upper-middle and upper- income Americans, Muskie sug gested increases in the minimum tax law, to make sure everybody pays a share of the tax burden. “There is no economic justification for taxing the buying power of mid dle Americans at a time when we are in a serious national recession,” he added. The senator said a temporary cut in payroll taxes would increase the buying power of Americans and re duce the incentive of labor unions to press for ever-higher wage settle ments. And Muskie called on Ford to spell out before the Nov. 5 election just what federal budget cuts he has in mind. Muskie said his own proposals are aimed at fighting not only inflation but recession as well. He added he is concerned that the Ford program, spelled out to a joint session of Con gress and to the FFA convention, “does not reflect the seriousness of our economic situation.” No economic plan can be ade quate today unless it attacks the energy shortage, which is responsi ble for 2‘A percentage points of in flation, Muskie said. He repeated Ford’s call for rigid- energy consrrvation, and added that unless automobile manufacturers agree to increase gasoline mileage of new cars over the next two years, “mandatory legislation to impose fuel-economy requirements will be required. ” At the same time, Muskie added, every effort must be made to find alternative energy sources, to take the pressure off imported oil. the re-election campaign of Repub lican Sen. Henry Bellmon, who admits he faces “an uphill battle” against Democratic Ed Edmond son. / Bellmon and the state’s other Re publican senator, Dewey Bartlett, sat in on the hotel room session be tween Ford and five representatives of Oklahoma’s cattle and dairy in dustry. Bellmon said afterward that Ford “indicated an inclination to ward reimposing” quotas on beef imports. But the White House gently dis puted Bellmon’s statement. Press Secretary Ron Nessen said Ford told the meeting there was “a high degree of liklihood he would limit dairy imports. But Nessen would not make a similar assertion on beef imports. When the newsmen pressed for the President’s position on beef im ports, Nessen talked with Ford by telephone and reported “the Presi dent will talk to Agriculture Secret ary Butz about the question of beef imports next week.” Dairy imports already are li mited, but NcsSen’s comment indi cated Ford was moving toward a further tightening. Beef import quotas were suspended by then- —President Richard M. Nixon more than a year ago in a move to bring down high retail prices on meat. WOMEN CADETS are required to greet upperclassmen the same as fish in the Corps except for “whipping out” which is the cadet version of shaking hands. (Photo by Keith Warner) Drug panel seeks adult education ‘Students know more than educators’ By DEBI HOLLIDAY Staff Writer The present attempts to prevent drug abuse through education are being laughed at since the students know more than the educators, said Nancy Pressler, coordinator of Youth Work Experience Programs, Tuesday night at a drug abuse semi nar. ^ The lack of public awareness and help services concerned with drug related problems were brought out in a seminar sponsored by the Brazos County Community Coun cil. Eight people involved in drug abuse programs spoke on the statis tical aspects of drug abuse, dealing with the drug abuser and counsel ing. “The biggest problem is in get ting something started to inform the adults about what is going on and what they can do about it, ” Pressler said. Education in the schools has not proved to be an effective prevention of drug abuse. So, M. B. Flippen with The Answer, a local counseling service, stressed the need for therapy which “shares the concepts of Christ by putting them in a form the abuser can use.” “Anything short of the real power to care isn’t going to be effective,” said Flippen. Dr. Lamar McNew, a local physi cian, agreed with this type of coun seling. “No one has pat answers for solutions because we are people de aling with people. If we can show them that we care, then we can help,” said McNew. Local citizens can help the prob lem by “contacting some agency if they acquire any information in re lation to drug abuse,” said Jack Wil liams, of the Brazos Valley Mental Health Center. “Don’t just sit on the problem.” Others speaking included Doug Ridge, regional drug abuse coor dinator; Tony Nowlin, with Out reach; Roland Searcy, county attor ney of Brazos County; and John Godfrey, Brazos County Probation Officer. Toad torn down In the tradition of Marat/Sade” and “Pink Flamingos,” the A&M community has once a gain been saved from exposure to the morally offensive. The most recent inci dent occurred Saturday the Krueger-Dunn dining hall before the A&M-TCU football game. At that time Pres ident Jack K. Williams was holding a banquet for local dignitaries and guests. When walking down the steps leading to the dining hall, Williams noticed a large spirit sign placed so prominently it eould not be unnoticed. The sign read, “Lay one on the Homy Toads” and pictured a frog lay- ! n g Provocatively with le gs spread apart. Williams told his spe cial assistant, Roger Mil- er » to have the sign re moved, which he did Personally. There was TCU brass attending the banquet,” Miller said. Immigration agents unable to stop flood of wet-backs BRAIN WAVES are measured by a device which plugs into the outlet set in this rabbit’s head. Experiments are going on that inject alcohol into the rabbit’s stomach so the experimenters can watch the change in the brain wave patterns. (Photo by Chris Svatek) LOS FRESNOS (AP) —The Un ited States is being swamped by a flood of illegal Mexican aliens and the U.S. government doesn’t have the money or manpower to stop them, thecommissioner ofthe U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service said Tuesday. Commissioner Leonard Chap man Jr. said the flood of wetbacks—estimated at 4 million last year—is displacing American jobholders by grabbing up jobs, some paying $4.50 to $6 an hour. “We are being overrun by illegal aliens. They are coming in by the millions and without legislation and additional money and manpower there is little we can do to halt the flood,” Chapman told a news con ference. The executive was here to address graduates of the U.S. Bor der Patrol Academy. Chapman said six to seven million Mexican aliens are now in this coun try and hold down jobs which right fully belong to American citizens. Chapman said because of a shor tage of funds the government is forced to permit aliens in many in stances to go free in this country until they become involved in other criminal activity. “We are seeing just the beginning of the problem. Nearly 90 percent of the illegals we apprehend come from Mexico. He said 82 new Border Patrol ag ents graduated recently from the academy here is but a drop in the bucket. The 1,610 agents now in the field, he said, are “far short of what is needed to do the job.” Chapman said it is “very possi ble” that wetbacks arrested by city or state police, for example, in Il linois, would not be deported be cause of the costs of transporting the alien back to Mexico. “He probably would be turned loose on his own recognizance and told to return to Mexico,” he exp lained. Several officials in the audience chuckled. He noted that 4,200 wetbacks were arrested in the last three months in Los Angeles. Many of them, he said, were employed in heavy industry. Retail price increase sharpest since 1947 WASHINGTON (AP) — Infla tion surged ahead in September as retail prices rose another 1.2 per cent, the Labor Department re ported Tuesday. The increase pushed consumer prices 12.1 percent higher than a year earlier, the sharpest increase in any 12-month period since 1947. Retail prices increased across most of the economy last month with food, clothing and mortgage in terest rates leading the way. A few items declined, notably gasoline and fresh fruits and vegetables. President Ford’s economic advis ers have predicted that retail prices will continue rising at a rate of about 1 percent a month through the end of the year, and that there would be no significant easing of inflation until sometime next year. The year already is destined to go down as the worst peacetime in flationary year on record. Retail prices have climbed 9.7 percent so far this year, surpassing last year’s rise of 8.8 percent, which was the worst since 1947. The Labor Department began the Consumer Price Index in 1913 and government analysts said the current inflationary rate was ex ceeded only during war time economies. The 1.2 percent rise in prices last month, adjusted to account for sea sonal influences, is equivalent to an annual rate of 14.4 percent if pro jected over the full year.