W Che Battalion Vol. 65 No. 11 College Station, Texas Wednesday, October 1, 1969 Telephone 845-2226 Perimeter Parking Will Get Lighting By Pam Troboy Battalion Staff Writer Lighting will soon be installed in perimeter parking lot number 49 in response to a Civilian Stu dent Council resolution passed last fall. The lot, which runs parallel to Farm to Market Road 2154, was the scene of several thefts last year. The 1967-68 CSC studied the problem, but was unable to initiate any action, according to David Middlebrooke, last year’s CSC secretary. When the theft situ ation became critical last fall, he said, a council resolution urging installation of lighting was sent to A&M President Earl Rudder and received his approval. A feasibility study by the Texas Transportation Institute and negotiations between A&M and College Station officials concern ing cost-sharing delayed action on the lighting, Middlebrooks said. The light system should be in stalled before Nov. 1, barring un foreseen weather problems, ac cording to Charles Brunt, assist ant manager of construction for A&M. “Last year out of 81 cases of breaking and entering automo bile, 24 were in lot 49,” said J. D. Gossett, Campus Security patrol man. “The problem should be cut down tremendously with the new lights.” Brunt said that 13 light stand ards with double lights will be installed in the parking lot and five more with single lights will be installed from the lot to Jersey Ave. He explained that the double light poles will light both the parking lot and the highway, while the single-light poles will light only the highway. “The project is almost com plete,” Brunt said. “The holes have been drilled, the concrete has been poured, the reinforced steel is in, and the anchor bolts are in place. The only things we lack are the poles and the trans former. Both are delayed delivery items and should be here by Oct. 15.” Brunt also said that the items would be installed upon arrival, and gave “a couple of weeks” as his estimate of when the project should be completed. The light standards will be 40 feet tall and provide 400 watts of lighting power. Cost of the lights is $26,000. SULLY GETS HIS FIRST FACE LIFTING 1 Gung-ho residents of Walton Hall were the first this fall to give the spit and polish treatment to the statue of Lawrence Sullivan Ross standing in front of the Academic (Building. They also polished the base of the flag pole across from Sully and gave the once-over to the Liberty Bell replica in the Academic Building foyer. James P. Hannigan, jdean of students, commended the residents for their “initiative in maintaining this campus tradition.” Ex-A&M Employee Faces Charges of Fraud Today From 81 to 700 Number of Foreign Students Rising at A&M By Tim Searson Battalion Staff Writer A hearing is scheduled to begin in Houston today involving the sale to a Houston tool company of government surplus equipment given to Texas A&M and a for mer university employee. Over 100 tools and machines jgiven to the university by the federal government for education al purposes are reported to have been offered for sale by Anthony L. Kramer of Bryan. The FBI had charged Kramer, former spe cial projects co-ordinator for the heavy equipment training school in the Texas Engineering Exten sion Service, with fraud in the base. The suit, filed in Houston, names Industrial Machine Tools, Inc., as the other party in the sale. A restraining order has been sought to stop the sale of more equipment by A&M, along with the recovery of any money from previous sales. Government officials allege that most of the machinery was never used for educational purposes as intended and that some of the equipment was sold without authorization. When asked what kind of equipment was actually involved, H. D. Bearden, director of the Engineering Extension Service, said, “I know nothing more than has already been released to the newspapers.” Jim Lindsey, director of uni versity information, stated earlier in the week that the irregularity had been discovered and investi gated by A&M officials who turned the matter over to the appropriate state agency. Kramer, who had served the university for more than 20 years, was dismissed after the discrep ancy was uncovered, and placed on a $10,000 personal recogni zance bond in Houston. Lane Stephenson, associate di rector of university information, said that any further develop ments in the case would evolve from the hearing in Houston. By Raul A. Pineda Battalion Staff Writer The foreign student population at A&M has increased more than eight times over the last 20 years, with the number of students growing from 81 in 1948 to more than 700 this semester. “This is an all-time record for the number of foreign students attending the university,” said Robert L. Melcher, foreign stu dent adviser. According to Melcher, this has been the result of a constant quality improvement in the uni versity programs and the job done in different countries by technicians working under the international programs of A&M. The new enrollment includes the registration of more than 150 new foreign students, which is also an all-time record, accord ing to Melcher. The largest group of foreign students ever registered at A&M comes from 65 countries geo graphically distributed all over the world. Melcher, who has been foreign adviser during the last 12 years, talked enthusiastically about the outstanding position of A&M in the foreign world, and contrasted The Life Style of a Mafioso—Part II Divorce a Danger to the Mafia By Bernard Gavzer &) News Features Writer The danger of divorce was clear to the Mafioso when Anna Gene- rese brought suit against Vito Senovese in 1952. She wanted 1350 a week support for her laughter and the two children die had with Vito. He could eas- ly afford it, her suit said, since le brought home $30,000 a week Torn the numbers racket. Until inna spelled it out, no one close ;o the inside ever publicly said low much money anyone had. The late Mike Coppola, better mown as Trigger Mike, went nto retirement in Miami Beach vhere it was generally thought ic was a dedicated tender of or- hids. He had running trouble vith his wife, Ann, who unlike my other known wife, daughter mistress of a Mafia man, kept diary. This diary was discov- red after her suicide in 1962, id one of its revelations dealt |ith the time Mike left a pack- tge at a restaurant and was .nxious to recover it. When he !id, he showed Ann its contents *-$219,000. From the lottery, he xplained. The head of a Mafia family reats it as though it is his na- ural family. His paternalistic ■ole makes him responsible to WEATHER Thursday — Cloudy to partly cloudy. Wind Eeasterly 5 to 10 m.p.h. High 87, low 64. Friday — Partly cloudy. Wind Southerly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 84, low 67. his family members and their children and relatives, in some cases. The De Cavalcante tran scripts concern one situation in which Sam the* Plumber as he was also known because of a le gitimate business he operated be came distressed because one Frank Ferrone told his wife he loved another woman. The wife was the daughter of an impris oned DeCavalcante member. Sam automatically took it as his duty to oversee her welfare, even though she was married. A man discussing this with Sam promised to see that Fer rone does not go bad. He adds that if Ferrone does not see the light, through normal persuasion, he will “break his leg or his head.” Despite a kind of puritanism, there apparently is no injunction against “playing around.” But even here there is a style. “It is according to position,” says a Boston investigator. “The family boss could have some cheap little blonde but surpris ingly you‘11 find that they have mistresses for whom they ex press love. Maybe it’s because almost all of the top people are in their 60s and 70s.” “The younger guys, the ones at the bottom, the ones called soldiers or button men,” says the investigator, “can be seen with what they call broads. These women are flashily dressed, good looking and might otherwise be high-priced hookers.” One high ranking Mafioso who was usually described by his neighbors as a “nice” man, im pressed one neighbor as “a de voted husband who came home late every afternoon to take care of his sick wife.” Another said of his comings and goings: “You could set your clock by them.” But then, they could not have known how much time he spent with his mistress, a woman in her late 40’s. She lived elsewhere in the city, and also had a nice house on a lake shore, and a Cadillac, and other things. The wives are not ignored by University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. Ticket Pick-up Schedule Announced for Tech Game Graduate students and seniors may pick up tickets for the A&M-Texas Tech game beginning Thursday at the Athletic Business Office ticket windows at G. Rollie White Coliseum, announced Sam Torn, head yell leader. All other students, Torn said, may obtain tickets beginning at 8 a.m. Friday. Last day for buying tickets, according to the business office, is 5 p.m. next Wednesday. The business office also noted that students must have their activity cards to purchase tickets. Purchases will be limited to one student and one date ticket per person. Students may purchase tickets for friends, however, if they have the other person’s activity card. any means. At certain functions, they are fixtures: wakes and fu nerals, weddings and even some baptisms. Ann Coppola wrote in her diary that wives, mistresses and chil dren are privately recipients of all the symbols of great wealth. Ann Coppola wrote in her diary that Mike had given her $250,000 in jewelry, furs and fine clothes. But, she complained, it was not out of love but because he want ed to prove to his peers how suc cessful he was. Anna Genovese, in her divorce suit, praised her husband as a man who lavished things on her, denying her nothing. But he could also be violent, she said. Once, in a fit of temper, he set her hair on fire. Genovese la mented then: “What she step on my heart for?” Apparently unforgiving, his will made public recently cut her off without a cent, provided $5 for Anna’s daughter, and left 90 per cent to his daughter and the remainder to his son. Genovese reportedly was worth $30 million, but the dollar amount of the es tate won’t be made public until next May. Sometimes the private munifi cence has an unintended humor. Last July, it is reported, a teen age daughter of a Mafioso went to a summer resort with three girl friends to spend the day. While everything had been paid for in advance, daddy had also slipped her some spending mon ey. When she went to pay for some hamburgers, she found the (See Mafia, page 3) Bryan Building & Loan Association. Your Sav ing Center, since 1919. the figures from the registration during the last two decades. “During the fall of 1948 the number of foreign students at A&M was 81,” he said. Last se mester we had a total enrollment of 611 and now we have gone over the 700 mark.” The figures given by Melcher show that the increase in foreign students population at A&M has not been a type of blow-up situ ation, but the result of a con stant improvement in the differ ent curricula and a wide recog nition throughout the world to the work done by this university. According to Melcher, during the decade 1948-58 the foreign students’ number more than dou bled. In this period the enrollment rose from 81 to 175. The following decade, 1958-68, brought an even greater when the enrollment rose from 175 to 611. Talking about the outstanding position held by students from other countries, Melcher said that every semester the number of foreign students receiving de grees at commencement ceremo nies is bigger. “Last May we had 67 students receiving B.S. or graduate de grees,” he said. As an average, Melcher said, about 49 per cent of the foreign students are enrolled in agricul ture; 49 per cent in engineering, and the other 20 per cent in archi tecture, business, veterinary med icine and other major fields of study. According to the foreign advi sor at A&M, there is an equal proportion betweten foreign stu dents working in the undergrad uate and graduate schools. He remarked that the propor tion was favorable to the grad uate students during the fall se mester 1963, when “the total en rollment was 356 foreign students, 194 being graduate students.” Melcher likes to talk about his work and the difficulties when the number of new applications is high. “The total number of applica tions every semester is over 1,200, but we classify them and the number of approved ones is about 200. “This is one of the most diffi cult types of work done by my office and it requires many hours of extra work,” he said. Col. Melcher has received awards from different countries and a number of associations and clubs organized at A&M. Among the awards presented to him are certificates, blankets, sculptures and other items from the student associations of Mexi can, Pakistanian, Indian and Chi nese. During last semester, the lead ing country at A&M was the Dominican Republic with 79 stu dents, followed by China, 56; In dia, Pakistan 50; and Mexico, 44. The representation from the other 59 countries varies from one to 20 students. A&M Profs Invent to Serve Needs of Community: Briggs By Frank Griffis Special to The Battalion “More and more Texas A&M University professors are invent ing things to serve the needs of the community rather than for the sake of inventing,” E. Ridley Briggs, president of the B-CS Chamber of Commerce, told mem bers of a community development seminar held in the Architecture Auditorium on the A&M campus Tuesday evening. Briggs said an example of com munity-minded university profes sors is the professor who invented a new research cage, another who developed a new type of heel for shoes which helps children with foot problems, and the low cost housing units manufactured by Hanover Modular Homes. “They invented because they saw a need,” Briggs said. “The key question is what can my relation to Texas A&M Uni versity be?” Briggs said. “We are on the threshold of a great wave of new technology and you must seek new challenges to change the community environ ment to what you want it to be,” David B. Smith, planning Dynam ics Inc. board chairman, and main speaker at the seminar, said. Smith said faculty members must be encouraged to further cooperation between the univer sities, the community and indus tries. “Faculty members should also be encouraged to cooperate with local government in solving civic problems,” Smith said. “It is becoming that industrial companies are taught all new management techniques. In the future, education could become a lifetime deal,” Smith said. “Do you encourage faculty members to serve on boards of directors?” Smith asked. “Do you encourage them to think about the world of industry and com merce?” Smith added. “There is no way to have in stant success between universities and industry,” Smith said. “There needs to be developed an environ ment that will attract local inven tors and industrialists to settle in the community,” Smith concluded. FIRST BANK & TRUST—Home of the Super C D - 5% interest compounded daily. BB&L —Adv. ONE FOR WAITING A Vietnamese child licks his first ice cream while his parents vote to elect hamlet of ficials in Thoi Thanh in the Mekong- delta area of South Vietnam. The government’s Revolutionary Development Team, which supervised the elections, brought in the ice cream for children of the voters. (AP Wirephoto)