I Yell Practice 10:30 Tonight at Henderson Hall out In'siu! 1 ! SJ Mil. Che Battalion Vol. 65 No. 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, September 18, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 “LET ME SAY RIGHT AT THE START ...” Gerry Geistweidt, Student Senate president, addresses the larg-est senate ever at its first meeting of the school year. (Photo by Mike Wright) Room Squeeze Eases; 75 Now Await By P. Harrison Battalion Staff Writer The number of students with out a room has dwindled to be tween 50 and 75, according to Housing Manager Allan M. Made- ley, and more rooms are gradually becoming available. Students who reserved a room this fall but failed to pay their fees and have not shown up are the primary source for additional space, Madeley said Wednesday. He added that more should crop up in the next few days. People who have paid their fees but have not shown up consti tute another source of rooms, but Madeley expressed his reluctance to fill these until the housing office learns the whereabouts of the persons who reserved them. According to Associate Dean of Students Don R. Stafford, 169 people have not claimed their rooms. Of these, 33 are known to have not paid their fees and will not be returning to school, which leaves 136 still in doubt. Stafford said the decision on what to do with these remaining “no-shows” will be made today. University Women to Meet, Discuss Plans For Year The University Women of Texas A&M have set Oct. 7 in the Memorial Student Center As sembly room as the date and place for their first meeting of the year, announced Coordinator Gloria Shone. It will be primarily an organi zational meeting, Miss Shone ex plained. She went on to say that suggestions for activities during the coming year will be submit ted to the girls for their com ments and consideration. Presently the University Wom en have tentative plans for a faculty-student tea so the coeds may become acquainted with some of the outstanding women of College Station such as the wives of the deans and board of di rectors members, as well as the members of the A&M Mother’s Club. Also planned is the girls’ Outlook Promising on Tickets, Weather For LSU Game Prospects for the A&M Louisiana State University game appear good as availability of tickets in Baton Rouge is coupled with predictions of fair weather for the game. The Baton Rouge A&M Club is making available game tickets for Aggies who have been unable to obtain any. They may be obtained, the club has announced, by contacting Skipper Post, 8935 Brookwood Drive in Baton Rouge, or calling him at 926-8634 The Baton Rouge Hometown Club has invited Ags to their open house at the Bellemont Motor Hotel Saturday. Activities begin at 2 p.m. when the bar opens. Drinks will cost 85 cents and a buffet supper prior to the game will cost S3 per plate. A dance, from 10:30.p.m. —1:00 a.m. follows the game. Weather between here and Baton Rouge late Friday and early Saturday should be passible, according to Jim Lightfoot, A&M meteorologist. He said some scattered rainshowers along the road are forecast. Lightfoot added that a trough line drifting to the southeast should pass through here sometime late Wednesday or early Thursday. “There will be nothing heavy with it,” he commented. “We’ll have gradual clearing on the back side of the trough and by game time Baton Rouge will have partly cloudy skies, easterly winds five to ten knots, a 75 degree temperature, and 60 percent relative humidity.” ‘Legal Commission’ Proposed To Senate Space He commented that the main concern right now is moving the 40 people in Hotard Hall who are presently tripled up into the 33 remaining vacancies as quickly as possible. In addition to the initial hous ing shortage, almost 125 students showed up this fall without re serving a room, and many of these were also put on the wait ing list, Madeley said. In the meantime, 50 to 75 stu dents are running up bills at local motels, hunting apartments and imposing on relatives while they wait for their room key. traditional help with the bonfire built prior to the Thanksgiving Football game with the Univer sity of Texas, Austin. Earlier in the month the or ganization sponsored an orienta tion session for the new girls on campus and followed it with an informal get-together last Sunday to answer questions the girls had and provide an oppor tunity for them to get to know each other. Another project in the offing for the coeds this year will be the organization of a woman’s in tramural program with the help of Raymond L. Fletcher, intra mural director. Members of the University Women have also volunteered to assist the MSC Fashion Commit tee in planning and presenting their upcoming fall fashion show. Officers for the year in addi tion to Miss Shone are Dianna Hanna, new programs; Mary Hanak, old programs; Judy Guogh, communications; and Nancy Stone, secretary-treasurer. WEATHER Friday—Cloudy with afternoon rainshowers. Easterly winds 5 - 10 m.ph. High 84, low 68. Saturday—Partly cloudy, east erly winds 10 - 15 m.p.h. High 82, low 66. Baton Rouge Kickoff—Cloudy, easterly winds 10 m.p.h., tem perature 77, 60 per cent relative humidity. Bryan Building & Loan Association. Your Sav ing Center, since 1919. B B & L —Adv. By Dave Mayes Battalion Editor A Legal Rights Commission that would aid A&M students in trouble with the law and check into reports of student “harrass- ment” by local police was pro posed to the Student Senate Wednesday by Gerry Giestweidt, president. Geistweidt told the 75-member body, largest Senate in the history of the school, that because this was the first meeting of the school year he was not asking for any action on his proposal that night. He indicated, however, that he would appoint a committee later to study the need for such a com mission. The student body president himself believed there is a “real need” at A&M for the legal coun sel the commission could provide. “Every weekend, about 15 or 20 students are arrested in Bryan-College Station on charges of either minor consuming or minor in possession of alcohol,” he began. Though many of these students were arrested legally, Geistweidt continued, there are cases where they are not, and all, regardless, should have a chance to confer wtih a lawyer or get some kind of advice before they go to court. The Senate president noted, however, that most students charged wtih offenses don’t even go to trial because either they have to attend classes that con flict with the time court is in session or they have no money to pay a lawyer to represent them. “So they usually wind up for feiting a cash bond that is con verted to a fine when they fail to appear,” Geistweidt explained. “A Legal Rights Commission composed of professors, students and others who have a knowledge of the law, could give students legal advice or provide loans to pay lawyer fees.” Geistweidt criticized Bryan-Col lege Station businessmen for “making money off the lack of recreational facilities for stu dents.” He said that students did not have much else to do on weekends but head for the nearest carry-out store to buy beer. And he wondered if this situ ation were not created on pur pose. Geistweidt said he knew of instances where police arrested students outside carry-out stores wtih beer they had just bought, yet did nothing to the store clerks who sold it to them. “Selling beer to a minor is just as much against the law as a minor buying it,” he said. “A Legal Right Commission could assure that students get equal protection under the law.” SingingCadet Tryouts Now Being Held Singing Cadets tryouts will be held in G. Rollie White Coliseum, Room 119, from 2:00 to 4:30 p.m. this Thursday and Friday and all of next week, announced John Roby, public relations officer. Roby said there will be 30 ap plicants chosen. Any student who has a schedule conflict for the tryouts should contact Robert L. Boone, director of the Singing Cadets, in the Memorial Student Center Student Programs Office, Roby added. The Singing Cadets have been asked for the sixth time to sing at the Miss Teen-Age America Pageant in Fort Worth on Nov. 15, he said, noting that CBS tele vision network will televise the pageant. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. Geistweidt added that he has received several complaints that Campus Security officers stopped students in their cars for no other reason than for the way they looked. He told the Senate that several students who had made this com plaint believed that they were stopped because of their race. “This is no gossip, either,” the president said. “A good friend of mine rode in a car one day with one who had complained about this and they were stopped twice by Campus Security for ques tioning because they looked sus picious.” He cited another time when an A&M student was fined $50 after he was arrested by a Bryan policeman for “suspected attempt ed burglary.” Geistweidt said the officer apprehended the student as he was trying to get the atten tion of a clerk inside a carry-out store that had just closed. He said a Legal Rights Com mission could look into incidents such as these also. Geistweidt urged senators to think about his proposal and to look into the need for such a commission. In other business, the Senate passed a resolution requesting A&M President Earl Rudder to take $5,400 from the student ac tivity reserve funds to pay for the Aggie Band trip to the A&M- Texas Tech game in Lubbock Oct. 11. Head Yell Leader Sam Torn introduced the measure, explain ing that plans for the band to attend the West Point game Oct. 4 had fallen through and that the band members, head football coach Gene Stallings and the Aggie Exes in Lubbock all wanted the band to be there for A&M’s first Southwest Conference game. Several senators objected, say ing that the request was for more money than that of the entire Senate budget, which Rick Reese, first treasurer of the Senate had reported earlier at $4,500. Torn said that about $100,000 was coming into the activities fee fund and that the money taken out for the band would be put back into the fund later. Geistweidt reported that Presi dent Rudder seemed to be in favor of spending the money on the trip, if the Senate requested him to. A spokesman for the band said the money would be used only for transportation expenses incurred by eight 39-passenger buses. Torn’s resolution passed by a vote of 35-8. Nokomis (Butch) Jackson, chairman of the reorganized 9- man Election Commission, re ported that the commission will meet Monday to attempt to set a date for the election of a Senate vice president. The office became vacant last spring when Geistweidt, elected vice president in an earlier race, was voted in as president after the first presidential election was tossed out due to the scholastic ineligibility of the winner, A1 Reinert. Kent Capterton (vp- MSC) is serving as interim vice president until another is elected. Jackson noted that other offices to be filled are Senate seats from the newly formed College of Edu cation and another Senate post from the College of Agriculture. Senators heard introductory re ports from permanent committee chairmen to help hem decide by next Senate meeting which com mittees they want to join. Committee chairmen include Lee Crawley, Issues; Jerry Bram- lett, Welfare; Collier (Doc) Wat son, Student Life, and Marc Powell, Public Relations. Sec. Hardin Notes Needs Of Farm Programs of 70’s Farm programs must be devel oped in the 1970’s that will ef fectively serve the farmer’s needs and still be acceptable to nonfarm people, Secretary of Agriculture Clifford M. Hardin said here to day. The secretary made the state ment in opening a “listening con ference” with farm and rural leaders from five states meeting in G. Rollie White Coliseum. “Future programs must recog nize the need for farm producers to increase their net incomes to the end that they will be able to share more equitably in the nation’s economic progress,” Hardin said. “They must enable U. S. farm products to compete effectively in export markets. “And, they must reduce the costs of production adjustment. “Next week my staff and I will begin presenting recommenda tions to the Congress on a long- range resource adjustment policy, as well as on modifications of ex isting commodity programs,” he continued. “Because at this point in time we believe there is more than one way the overall objectives can be served, our recommenda tions will take the form of a series of possible courses of ac tion. “There is still time for you here in the Southwest, as well as for people in all other regions, to contribute ideas,” Hardin added. Gov. Preston Smith and A&M President Earl Rudder also made brief remarks this morning to open the conference. Hardin was scheduled to hear at least 32 speakers on agricul ture topics that ranged from farm credit and policy to crop land problems and human re sources. In addition, he was to hear numerous unscheduled speakers from the floor in the one-day session. Dr. Kunkel said the conference is open to any person who has an interest in agriculture and its economic well-being. In a news conference before the listening session began, Har din said that food prices had not risen as fast as the increase in the consumer’s disposable income. He said that consumers this year are spending 17 per cent of their income on food, the same percentage they spent as last year. The secretary added that this percentage of income spent on food was the lowest ever for persons living in the United States, or in the world. The A&M conference was the fifth in a series of regional farm policy meetings designed to ob tain the viewpoints of agricul tural and rural leaders. It was attended by representatives from Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Louisiana, and Arkansas. Dr. H. O. Kunkle, dean of the College of Agriculture, Texas A&M Univer sity, presided. Previous conferences have been held at Lincoln, Neb.; Pullman, Wash.; Fresno, Cal.; and Athens, Ga. HARDIN ARRIVES Secretary of Agriculture Clifford Hardin, center, talks with A&M President Earl Rud der, left, and Dr. H. O. Kunkle, dean of the College of Agriculture, at the Briarcrest Coun try Club. The secretary arrived here last night for a “listening conference” today.