The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 13, 1970, Image 1
ciiij he as aecoiK >ra yes , b SaiiJ,, 'rill Pieli match« for th| N overti!),, mester i, ason, th i tourntj s seatfe o continn, th IB HR r time tin very set, ^ do tt| titutiorn fhen oiilj the gan> m thiB s awarJd points St after eon. (its for i Its havisj ights ami >unt. Che Battalion warming slightly, clear Saturday — Cloudy. Winds northerly 10-20 mph. Low 42 de grees. High 55 degrees. Sunday — Clear to partly cloudy. Winds northerly 10-15 mph. Low 36 degrees. High 58 degrees. Kyle Field — Saturday, cloudy. Winds northerly 10-20 mph. 52 degrees. Vol. 66 No. 44 College Station, Texas Friday, November 13, 1970 845-2226 Thurmond criticizes socialism, violence earn, c®. scord good Texaa Im Congres ouston fe year Sat Jnivenitj 11 be Lar ’ell, Alai k Littara average! the fint exas Ted State is iston pnr By PAM TROBOY Battalion Staff Writer U. S. Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina pointed out what he called “Myths and Realities” in contemporary society Thursday in a Political Forum presenta tion. Stressing patriotism, religion and states rights, Thurmond told a crowd of 600 that he was proud to be an American. "No people ever enjoyed so much,” he said. “We have more and better distribution of prod- acts. Our gross national product is more than $900 billion while the Sino-Soviet bloc has a GNP of only $600 billion.” He said that with only six per cent of the world’s population, the United States has the finest schools and more material wealth than all the rest of the world combined. The U. S. also pro duces more food than the rest of the world with only seven per cent of the land, he added. “It is a myth that socialism holds the answer to the problems of the world,” Thurmond said. “American capitalism is superior to any other system ever known. Socialism is merely an attempt to level all men by economic rule. Capitalism is the goose that laid the golden egg.” Another myth is that civil dis obedience is acceptable, he said. no concern Anarchy results when people obey the laws they favor and dis obey the laws they disfavor, Thursmond said. “Violence hurts one’s cause,” he said. “Civil disobedience does not pay. If you disagree with our laws, run for office or encourage someone else to run. It makes no sense for students to take over a universtiy president’s office. Everything you do will be re corded. You are building your record beginning now.” A key member of the Judiciary, Armed Services and Defense Ap propriations Committee, Thur mond was the target of hecklers at the Universtiy of California at Riverside Wednesday. At Hall type of CSC sets rate for cards $20 1, HAYDEN WHITSETT Battalion News Editor The Civilian Student Council (CSC) Thursday night voted to have a single rate of 70 cents for every civilian student activity card whether or not the student lives in a program or non-pro gram dormitory. The previous system had every non-program dormitory selling the cards and paying the council 70 cents for every card sold no matter how many were sold. Program dormitories met at the close of activity card sales and through arbitration agreed upon a per capita “equalization” fee to he paid the council. The fee usu ally ran under 70 cents, i The vote, despite heavy oppo sition from the executive com mittee, passed with a vote of 18 Awards begun to stimulate Improvements The Community Appearance LCommittee of the Brazos County fEnvironmental Action Council has voted to award citations to business and home owners who contribute to developing Twin Cities appearance. Appearance Committee Chair man Michael Murphy said a subcommittee is developing cri teria by which recipients will be selected. Mrs. Fred D. Maurer of 2408 Moris Lane suggested awarding the citations to stimulate im provement and maintenance of “amenities” in the Bryan-College Station area, Murphy said. for the proposal, six against, and one abstention. Despite the wide margin of approval, Mark Olson, CSC pres ident, immediately recognized three members of the CSC who had voted against the proposal. After their critical remarks of how the CSC voted, the discussion was tabled. A reply to the criticism did not come until 20 minutes later, after a presentation by the manager of the Exchange Store. “I think the CSC should be mature enough to keep back biting out of their meetings, said Fernando Gian- netti, president of Sehuhmacher, who then sat down. An explanation of Exchange Store policies was given by man ager Charles R. Cargill. “The Exchange Store is the most misunderstood store on the campus,” he said. “It’s there to serve the Aggies.” The store takes in $1.5 million net each year, he added. With a rough average of eight per cent profit, the profit is approx imately $100,000. The new Exchange Store, to be finished by Christmas 1972, will be built out of the profits of the Exchange Store. The new store, will be built where the present Memorial Student Center bowling alley is, will have 40,000 square feet of space as compared to 10,- 000 square feet in the present store. According to Cargill, the new store will have as much floor space in books as the old one has in total space. Another sec tion is to be school supplies and things such as “sweatshirts, pup py dogs, and decals.” A large bulk of the profit comes from these “gimmcracks,” Car gill said. Decals cost triple what the store pays for them and sweat shirts double their wholesale price, he said. Used books are also another source of profit, but are balanced out by the sale of new books, he said. “We buy used books back at 50 per cent of the new price and sell them again for 75 per cent of the new price,” Cargill said. The profit made from used books balances low profit from new books, according to Cargill. New books must be sold at “list price” which lowers the amount of profit made. Earlier in the meeting, Bat talion Editor David Middlebrooke told hall presidents The Battalion is interested in being better in formed on hall activities. He asked each hall to appoint an information officer to be respon sible for keeping The Battalion informed of hall activities. Not everything turned in will be published, he stressed, and front-page display cannot be guaranteed, but The Battalion is interested in covering the halls better. A&M he was interrupted only twice, by applause. Thurmond also said that some people are taken in by the myth that peace “with the godless hosts of Communists” can be achieved if the leaders of the free world lay down their arms. No nation was ever attacked, he said, if it was militarily strong. Many people now think com munists are peaceful socialists who can be trusted, he said. But how can you trust a nation that is building a nuclear sub base in Cuba, that sneaked arms into the Middle East during a truce, and that is building Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles to destroy us, he asked. “We are at war with com munism, and we are losing be cause too many diplomats fear that the end of communism is the end to the social system that it rests on,” he said. Another popular misconception is that the federal dollar is a “cure-all,” Thurmond said. “Many people think money from Washington is ‘manna from heaven’,” Thurmond said. “Any time money is collected and sent to Washington, however, a big tool is taken out. The Internal Revenue Service should operate in each state and turn over a portion of the income and corpo rate license taxes to the state. Programs would be more efficient with less federal control.” Thurmond said many people think they can have a big gov ernment and retain all individual liberties. “That is completely wrong,” he said. “Big government suppresses freedom in direct relation to the power concentrated in that level of government.” He said the country was found ed on the principles of separate, divided and limited powers—“the greatest form of government the world has ever known.” “The government that governs least, governs best,” he said. “Any government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you’ve got.” Walton, to host Senate orphans By BRUCE BLACK Battalion Staff Writer Walton Hall and the Student Senate will be hosting orphans Saturday for the Rice game. Walton will be entertaining 32 junior high and highschool boys from Boys Harbor in La Porte, announced Leon Drozd, head of the project. “Walton has been looking for a good public service project for over a year now,” Drozd stated. The activities will start at 11:00 a.m. Saturday, when the Walton residents will host a pre game hamburger dinner for the boys. Walton has reserved a section on the east side of Kyle Field for the boys and their guests for Sat urday’s game with Rice. During the game, the boys will be split up and each assigned two “big brothers” from Walton. After the game, the teen-agers and Walton guests will be treat ed to a dinner at Sbisa Dining Hall. In an entirely different proj ect, the Welfare Committee of the Student Senate will be host ing 20 orphan boys from Faith Home in Houston for the day. “Such a program has been go ing on annually for several years,” Charles Hicks, head of the Welfare Committee, said. Students apply beforehand as escorts for the boys, and “adopt” the children, this year aging from seven to sixteen, for the day. The Aggies treat them to the game and dinner afterwards. The boys and their “big brothers” will be treated to lunch in Dun can Dining Hall before the game. Hicks asks all orphan escorts to please be in the lobby of the Memorial Student Center by 10:30 a.m. Saturday. U. S. Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.) speaks to a noontime Political Forum audience Thursday. Others on the stage are Richard Tillman, left, who introduced Thurmond, Po litical Forum Chairman Charles Hoffman, Associate Dean of Students Don R. Stafford and Executive Vice President A. R. Luedecke. (Photo by Bob Stump) Travel committee seeks to send students abroad The Memorial Student Center Travel Committee aims to con vince students next week during Travel Opportunity Week at Texas A&M that a foreign coun try can be a classroom. “The entire week is designed to put the bug in people to get overseas during the summer,” Gary Martin, head of the com mittee, explained. “It’s not too early to start getting ready,” he said. Sessions will be held nightly on various programs of the com mittee. Slides and movies will also be shown daily in the main lobby and travel poster-souvenir exhibits will be up, Martin said. “Independent World Travel and Charter Flights” will be the sub ject of a Monday meeting in the Assembly Room. Conducted by Jim Summers, the session will provide information on how stu dents can get to Europe on their own. “We’ve plenty of people who have been there and can give others the score,” Martin com mented. All meetings will be at 8 p.m. The Tuesday evening “Ski the Alps 71” informational meeting will be in the Ballroom. Those interested in making the between- semester trip will be shown slides of the ’70 trip. Summers, who chairs the “Ski the Alps 71,” said space is still available on the 250-seat charter jet. Experiment in International Living, one of the most popular of the MSC overseas programs, will be explained at a Wednesday meeting in the Assembly Room. Mina Akins, 1970 summer par ticipant of Portland will be in charge. More than 50 students have traveled in the “ambassador” program, learning the language of a country and staying with a family to see its culture from the native’s rather than a tour ist’s viewpoint. A choice of 70 countries is available. The meeting will have films and information on how to get loans and make applications. A Thursday meeting in the assembly room will be on summer job travel, such as the Interna tional Association for the Ex change of Students for Technical Experience (IAESTE). David Edwards, participant in England last summer, will dis cuss ways engineer and architec ture majors get jobs and the possibilities of majors in liberal arts and other fields obtaining foreign employment. Martin announced that the Overseas Photo Contest entry deadline has been extended to Nov. 20. Entries, slides and black-and-white or color prints taken during 1970 overseas travel, should be turned in at the Stu dent Program Office. 5 senators elected Freshman runoffs set for Thursday UT students to submit suits next week; public regents’ meeting won’t halt plan NATIONAL COFFEE HOUSE SINGER, Mary Smith per forms at the Basement Thursday night. She will give two (5-minute shows tonight and Saturday night at 8:30 and 10:30. Admission is 75 cent per person or $1.25 per couple. (Photo by Hayden Whitsett) By DAVID MIDDLEBROOKE Battalion Editor University of Texas at Austin students seeking to file suit against the UT board of regents for violation of the Texas open meetings law are redrafting their complaint and hope to submit it early next week. Andy Yemma, editor of The Daily Texan and one of the plain tiffs in the case, said the suit was presented Thursday to Travis County Attorney Ed Granger, who felt more research was need ed in some areas. That research was being done Thursday night, Yemma said. The action stems from a tele- phone meeting the regents held Monday to consider an action by the Texas Union Board concern ing opening the Chuck Wagon, an on-campus eating establish ment, to the public. For the past year, only students have been al lowed on the premises. The students plan to file two suits, one criminal and one civil. The criminal case, Yemma said, is to fine the regents for violat ing the law, and the civil case seeks to permanently injoin the regents from violating the law. Regents announced Thursday they will meet Saturday in Fort Worth to consider publicly the issue they discussed and voted on over the phone Monday. Yemma said the action has no bearing on the students’ case, and said he viewed it as a possible at tempt by the regents to “legita- mize” last Monday’s action. He said he didn’t believe it could be done. He also said he thought the regents might be taking the ac tion in the hopes the students will drop their cases. The cases will not be dropped, Yemma said, because that would give the ap pearance the students are bluff ing, and really weren’t interested. Such, he said, is not the case. Freshmen must go to the polls again Thursday to choose a pres ident, vice president, secretary- treasurer and social secretary in runoff elections. Nine hundred students, 36 per cent of the freshman class, turned out Thursday to vote for these officers and five senators at large. Election Commission President Mike Wiebe termed the turnout, “normal compared to previous years, but not necessarily good.” Randy Maness, journalism major of Pampa, and Mark Blakemore, geology major of Richmond will compete for the fish class presidency. Maness received 200 votes; Blakemore, 153. Randy Thomas was third of thirteen candidates with 82 votes. Jim Laferney, pre-med major of Longview, and Don A. Webb, accounting major of Arlington will vie for vice president. Laferney polled 203 votes; Webb, 174. Tim Hutcheson was third with 144 votes. John Rosenbaum, political science major of Alvin, and James K. Goode, agriculture edu cation major of Weimar, will run again for secretary-treasurer. Rosenbaum gleaned 298 votes; Goode, 219. Colleen Bourland was third with 210. Chris St. John, recreation and parks major of Dallas, and Rich ard Chaplin, electrical engineer ing major of Dallas, will partici pate in a runoff for social secre tary. St. John received 327 votes; Chaplin 224. Wayne Sneed was third with 184 votes. Five senators were chosen at large from 33 candidates. Barbara Sears, zoology major of Columbia, Mo., received 454 votes; L. R. (Buddy) King, archi tecture major of Marshall, 320; Randy Ross, management major of San Antonio, 317; Richard C. Huddleston, pre-med major of Houston, 218; and Bill Clark, chemical engineering major of Alvin, 203. Voting locations for Thursday will be announced Wednesday, Wiebe said. Computer calculation of results was labeled “great,” by Wiebe. “It took (Commissioner) Rob ert Riggs and I an hour to do what it usually takes five or six people several hours to do,” he said. “The procedure will defi nitely be used next week, and probably in the spring elections.” The election was the first one on campus to use IBM punch cards for ballots. Students were given three coloi*- coded cards—one for president; one for vice president; social sec retary and secretary-treasurer; and one for five Student Senate positions. Completed ballots were placed in locked containers and taken to the Data Processing Center after the polls closed. This morning the containers were unlocked, the cards were punched and counted by machine. First Review issue available The first edition of The Review for 1970-71 now is available, Editor Janie Wallace said Thurs day. Miss Wallace said the maga zine will be distributed in the Student Publications Office and in buildings used by the colleges sponsoring the magazine. The Review is the publication of the Colleges of Liberal Arts, Geosciences, Sciences, Business and Education. Miss Wallace said the un usually small size of the maga zine (16 pages, down from 32) is because three stories planned for the issue were censored by Liberal Arts Dean W. David Maxwell. Maxwell objected to opinion provably not based on truth being published in stories on black students at A&M. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv.