Che Battalion windy, Rainy, hot Vol. 66 No. 10 College Station, Texas Wednesday, September 16, 1970 Thursday — Partly cloudy to cloudy, afternoon rainshowers. Wind Southerly 10 to 15 m.p.h. High 84, low 71. Friday — Partly cloudy. Wind South 8 to 10 m.p.h. High 91 low 68. Baton Rouge — Partly cloudy. Wind Southeast 5 to 8 m.p.h. 80°, relative humidity 75%. Telephone 845-2226 5 student positions added by university By LEE DUNKELBERG Battalion Staff Writer University standing committees had their student membership bolstered this year with the addi tion of five new student positions, according to Kent A. Caperton, Student Senate President. The new seats were the result of the formation of three new commit tees and the addition of a stu dent member to the Student Pub lications Board. Students on these and other university committees hold voting privileges. The new committees include an Educational Television Commit tee, a Golf Course Advisory Com mittee, and a EHsciplinary Ap peals Panel. The Disciplinary Appeals Panel was formed out of the former Appeals Panel, which had no students on it, according to Ca perton. The Appeals Panel heard both academic and disciplinary appeals. The Disciplinary Appeals Panel was designed to hear ap peals for disciplinary action only. “It is a committee designed to offer an appeals mechanism for students booted out of the uni versity for a violation of the rules,” Caperton explained. “The Dean of Students’ repre sentative, a member of the fac ulty, will not vote. He will be bringing the charges. That was Dean Hannigan’s idea,” he added. The Academic Panel, which does not have student represen tation, was formed to take care of all academic appeals. The names of the two student members to the Disciplinary Ap peals' Panel have not been an nounced, but Caperton said Act ing President A. R. Luedecke will announce them in a few days. Student representatives to the new Educational Television Com mittee are David Smallwood, Morris K. Patterson, and John K. Hulse. Michael D. McMeans will serve on the Golf Course Advisory Board. Both of these committees were set up as administrative and advisory groups. Roger Miller was named as the first student representative to the Student Publications Board. In addition to the five new positions created this year, there were also 32 previously held stu dent posts that were filled. Appointed to the Exchange Store Advisory Board were Thom as C. Bain, Kent A. Caperton, Thomas C. Fitzhugh and Donald M. Olson. The Rules and Regulations (See students, page 4) NSF gives Economics 3-year, $458,000 grant i‘V /1 to be taking a shortcut down from the 12th floor of a The awarding by the National Science Foundation (NSF) of a $458,000 departmental science de velopment grant to the Economics Department at Texas A&M Uni versity was announced Tuesday in Washington by Cong. Olin E. Teague and Sen. John G. Tower. The three-year award will be used for improving the quality of research and education at un dergraduate and graduate levels through activities to be approved by the NSF, explained Dr. John W. Allen, economics department head. The original proposal requested aid in financing development of the department over a broad front, he said. “It is anticipated the grant money will be used for such things as hiring new faculty members, bringing visiting lecturers to the campus, setting up summer short courses instructed by visiting scholars, support for graduate student assistantships and pro viding support to the faculty for research,” Allen added Buyers must for ecology’s change ways sake: Hatfield By HAYDEN WHITSETT Battalion News Editor Ecology will be the United States’ greatest problem in the seventies Senator Mark O. Hat field (R-Oreg.) told a Political Forum audience Tuesday noon in the ballroom of the Memorial Student Center. “The real crisis we face today is a crisis in values,” the sponsor of the recently defeated amend ment to end the war in Vietnam told an overflow crowd. “We should look at ourselves as consumers and examine our present behavior,” he said. Ac cording to Hatfield, population, noise and other forms of ecologi cal pollution are expected to be come paramount in the next few years. The United States consumes forty per cent of the world’s re sources and produces fifty per cent of the world’s pollution, he said. GREAT SAVINGS PLAN made even better by new legal rates at FIRST BANK & TRUST. Adv. Much of the fault lies with the average individual or consumer. “It is easy to point the finger at someone else and fail to real ize that we have an individual role,” he said. Although there are over 1,000 bills on pollution before con gress and thirty committees deal ing with it, Hatfield emphasized that laws do little to change things, it is the individual who can and must work to stop pol lution. “We cannot consume in our present manner and control our ecological interests,” he said. “It is our life styles, not laws that will ultimately protect our envi ronment and ourselves.” “Each must act, not expecting others to do it for us.” Noise pollution, he said, is an area being overlooked in the pres ent ecological stew. “Noise is an established part of American life,” he said. “We are the noisiest nation in the world. Noise costs American in dustry 4 billion dollars a year in production and efficiency losses.” Approximately ten to twenty million Americans have impaired hearing and many more have some trouble but don’t know it, he said. Many experts, he added, expect the “rock generation” to be par tially deaf. “The grant will furnish addi tional resources allowing us to improve all levels of instruction and research, to expand the num ber of fields of specialization at the graduate level as well as add new undergraduate courses.” Allen said a significant aspect of the NSF grant is that it rec ognizes previous development of economics at Texas A&M under university and state support. “These awards are made only after a department has devel oped its expertise to a fairly high level,” Allen noted. Dr. W. David Maxwell, dean of the College of Liberal Arts of which economics is a part, re gards the department as the fin est in the South and Southwest. Potential is indicated for its de velopment into an internationally prominent one. Economics at Texas A&M en rolls 85 undergraduate and 70 graduate students in courses in structed by 23 faculty members. Dr. Allen became the head last summer, succeeding Dr. M. L. Greenhut after a year as acting head of the department. HIGH FLYING SKIER appears Vancouver (B. C.) apartment. Actually Brian Thompson, under tow by a motor boat on English Bay, ventured too close to civilization before landing. Rain Texas in wake of weather tropical fare storm HIGH ISLAND, Tex. (A>> — Tropical Storm Felice hit the Texas coast near here Tuesday night without ever attaining hur ricane force, and torrential rains fell in its wake. As much as 6.25 inches of rain descended at Galveston, and streets in that island resort filled with water. The Weather Bureau said Fe lice, with peak winds estimated at 70 miles per hour, began to break up shortly after its ill-de fined center crossed the coast about 25 miles northeast of Gal veston. In Galveston the top ve locity was 55 m.p.h. While official observers report ed the storm was dying fast, they said concentrated rains up to six inches could be expected along a narrow path as the storm moved northwestward through East Tex as during the night and today. Storm warnings were lowered along the Upper Texas and West Louisiana Coast at 11 p.m. Winds, tides and seas were expected to diminish during the night. The Department of Public Safe ty said one of its patrol cars traveled from High Island north east to Sabine Pass over Texas 87 as soon as the storm’s eye passed and reported the road was never under water, as had been expected. Radio program to feature pop music, Aggie news Sen. Mark Hatfield talks with students Tuesday. “Aggie Monitor,” a two-hour Thursday night radio show featuring popular music, A&M news items and interviews, goes on the air Sept. 24 on KORA in Bryan. KORA president and general manager Mike Mistovich said the 10-12 presentation will be conducted by A&M students and sponsored by local businesses. Deejays will be sophomore Harold Johnstone and Tommy Parker of Lake Jackson. “Aggie Monitor” executive editor is Larry Bowles, senior of LaGrange. “The program will be of interest to all Aggies,” commented Johnstone and Parker. “Students will be polled for music prefer ences. This will serve as a guide, along with station policy.” They said announcements of organiza tional activities, campus events and interviews with faculty and administration members will be presented. Early evacuation from Sabine Pass over Texas 87 had been urged, since the road was the only escape route after a bridge had been knocked out on another highway north to Port Arthur in a barge accident Sunday night. By 5 a.m. today the Weather Bureau placed the center of de caying Felice about 30 miles southeast of College Station and moving toward the northwest at 15 m.p.h. Top winds were down to an estimated 30 m.p.h. except in a few squalls. Of Galveston’s 6.25-inch rain, observers said 4.35 inches fell in the six hours before midnight. The rain belt covered South east and much of Central Texas, coming down in moderate to heavy amounts as it spread past the Dallas-Fort Worth area to the north and around Junction and Throckmorton to the west. Thunderstorms were mixed with showers in North Texas, and lighter showers pattered down in the Texas Panhadle from Ama rillo and Dalhart westward into New Mexico. A stationary cool front stretch ed across the Panhandle-Plains sector near Lubbock and a shal low layer of cool air was blamed for fog which limited visibility north of the front. Skies were at least partly cloudy nearly everywhere except in the Lower Rio Grande Valley. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. Senior finds memorial banner in math department trash WORLD WAR I memorial flag as it was unfurled for a photographer last week in the Duncan area. James Jones who found the flag is third from the right. (Photo by Art Chad well) By MIKE STEPHENS Battalion Staff Writer A 52-year-old memorial flag found in a trash can in the Aca demic Building? Sounds impos sible, especially at A&M, but it has happened. James B'. Jones, senior math major of Squadron 7, found a tradition rich flag, lost and for gotten, during the summer while cleaning was taking place. The 15 by 26 foot flag honor ing the Aggies who served in World War I had hung from the rotunda of the Academic Build ing for more than 20 years, he later found. The giant flag has 2,000 ma roon stars representing those Ag gies who fought in World War I, with 50 white stars in the center honoring the Aggies who died during the war. How can such a memorial be completely forgotten at a school such as A&M which has so many traditions, Jones wondered. Jones is working hard at find ing the answer, but he hasn’t been able to find many records of the flag. Only three photographs have been found. One is inside an old issue of The Battalion dated March 4, 1941, which was found laying with the flag. Another is an old Guion Hall photograph, where the flag first hung. And there is one in the movie “We’ve Never Been Licked.” Jones has found the following facts about the flag: The flag was created by an official act of Congress in 1918. During the renovation of Guion Hall, it was moved to the Aca demic Building until 1943 when it fell. It was to be repaired, but delays held it up, and soon it was stored. It has obviously been completely forgotten until now. Jones plans to return the flag when he finds out its history and records it. He also wants to make sure the flag will be kept in an appropriate manner. He is con sidering giving it to the Former Student Association. Anyone who has any knowl edge of the flag is requested to send the information to James B. Jones, P.O. Box 4657, College Station or see the Former Stu dents Association in the Memo rial Student Center. mm FLAG HANGS from third floor of the Academic Building rotunda, in picture printed in the March 4, 1941 issue of The Battalion. The picture was taken by Life photographer Francis (Nig) Miller.