P.0, VoL 06 Na 07 HagaMiNi Onnt» Tm» Friday, Graduates to elect five in mail vote next Cold, with rain l*»lf «•*. IMF U*. » n\ Of OAKY AVEN Stair Writer TW SwuWwi for *ko Groduote Student Council (CSC) apfeinl election in todny * * P-m. CSC Ylee Proeidont C. A. Bodinfer, Election Committee ^"Mn. anid Thuredny. Bnlleto will be prepared from «MUfled wominoM by next Tttee- dny, nnd the secretariea of the will put n ballot in each *F»d»ate student's mailbox. Bal-' lota must he mailed to the Grad uate Office in the Coke Building by December a, he said. *Thers is a great deal of apa thy among the graduate stu dents,- Bedinger said. -I hope we can get mere of them to eote.- The rsaasn for a large number of vacancies is the number at resignations this year. Alee G8C by-laws were recently changed, making executive members of the council ineligible to he members- at-large. Regular repreoantathree must be elected, Bedinger anid. to fill the following seats: one from the College of Architecture and En vironmental Design, one from the College of Education, on# from the College of Veterinary Medicine and two from the Col lage of In n ate students this fall, that Is, having law than 14 credit boon of graduate work as of the be ginning of the fall term. Regu lar elections are in the spring, he said, and those elected sarve from May until the following Hoy Bedinger said the qualifications for G8C membership, as written in the Council’s dew by-laws, are: CSC evaluates Bonfire; Drozd weekend head By SUB DAVIS Battalisa Staff Writer Leon Qrosd will be chairman of the Civilian Week-Weekend Activities Committee, Mark 01- soa. president of the Civilian Stu dent Council (CSC) announced Wednesday. Drosd, president of Wslton Hall, and Olson will choose chair man of II 4 sub-committees which will plan the activities of the week April lb-24, ouch as selec tion of a civilian sweetheart, a presentation dance, a Town Hall parformance, go-cart races, end iatramurals. The civil lag sweetheart will be dMuen from among the sweet hearts of the civtlisn student residence halls. The Presentation Dance will be held for civilian .students only. Admission will be free. Performers have not been chosen, for the Town Hall show. Olson guvs examples of some of the letters he had received in regard to the Bonfire. They con tained “great praise to both ’ Corps, civilian and female stu dents/’ he said. President Jack Williams was •specially pleased with the uni fied effort the students made, Olson stated. Hs also mid that Associate Dean of Students Don R. Stafford praised both civilian and Corps students, especially the yell leaders. Just over 1,000 civilian stu dents worked on the Bonfire, Ol son said. Although not as many peopls worked this your ns have in the past, the “effort was as grant or greeter," Howard S. Perry, Ci vilian Student Advisor, comment ed. Olson cited two factors which may have kept students' enthusi asm ddwn. These war# the me- I ord of the football team and the ecology sentiment of some. Four dorms wars given recog nition by Olson for their work on the Bonfire. They were Dnvip* -j Gary, Leg get, Moses, and Walton ' Halls. Thursday, December 17, each civilian hall will invite three or four members of tho administra tion or faculty to be that hall's guests for a Christmas dinner at Sbisa Dining Hall. The members of tho hall will draas up and sit together. The CSC is planning a retreat for th# week-end of either Feb ruary 4-7 or February 12-14. The location of the retfent has not been chosen yet. The CSC mem bers will have a chance to dis cuss plans for the rest of the year and to evaluate what they have done so far. Lnoa Drosd KAMU to telecast t (1 * r two special shows KAMU-TV will telncast Texas AAM University’» commencement exercises Saturday morning, announced Station Manager Mel Chastain. Chastain noted this marks the first time the university’s gradua tion ceremonies have ever been transmitted live. He end the station also will provide large-screen closed-circuit television Mrvtoe in the Memorial Student Center ballroom for any guests who might be unable to find seating in G. Rollie White Coliseum. Closed-circuit graduation coverage was provided for the first time last Chastain said KAMU will sign on Saturday morning at 9:25, five minutes before the start of graduation activities. A 30-minute interview with Dr. Jack K. Williams, Texas AAM president, will be telecut by KAMU at 8:30 pjn. Tuesday. The special program, entitled “A Visit With President Williams," will be hosted by Chutain. Chastain raid the interview will cover various topics, ranging from Dr. Williams' thoughts on Texas AAM’s future as a land-grant institution to his views on the Corps of Cadets, civilian students and coeds. KAMU-TV is received on Channel 12 via cable service, although the educational station operated by the university transmits on Channel 15. Donations asked for POW wives Theater Arts * vs wants space , for lab work The Theater Arte Section ia looking for space to aet up their equipment for laboratory work because Guion Hall, where they formerly worked, will be demol- * ished immediately after Christ mas, Director C. K. Eaten an nounced. Theater Arts has already re ceived offices, classrooms and storage space, but they need someplace to aet up their scenic studio, supplies, and equipment. A apace about 40 feet by 00 feet with 20 foot ceiling is seed ed. However, Theater Aria will take anything down to 20 feet by 40 feet with an eight foot ceiling. If anyone knows of'any apace available, he can call 846-4720. "(1) He must be a resident student admitted to the college and registered for at least eight **“(1) If he is a resident stu dent employed by the Texas AAM University System as a faculty member or graduate assistant, hie total responsibility must not be greater than a 60 per cent faculty load; aad, if an employee of the Texas AAM System, hs must provide services not in ex- ceos of 20 hours psr week. Fur ther, a bona fide first year stu dent is defined in the same way. with the additional require men* that he shall not have accrued more than 14 credit hours.” The whole procedure, nomina tions and balloting, will bo car ried out by mall. Bedinger said Students can help needy in local area Texas AAM’s Student IT As sociation reports there are still many needy families in the Bry- an-College Station area available for adoption this Christmas by university students, faculty, staff and the local community. Student ‘Y’ Association Cabi net president Ronnie Owens sug gests anyone interested in help ing a needy family contact the YMCA for information. “Without the help of AAM stu- dants and friends of tha univer sity, many of these families will AHt lMse a Ckristmag^hkjrear." The Student ‘Y’ Association bef a selection of toys and cloth ing available for individuals or groups to use in their Christmas packages to the needy. Owens said the needy family list includes names recommended by Bryan and College Station schools and religious groups. Senate debate likely on new SST funds bill WASHINGTON tfft—A House- Senate conference Thursday night approved a $210 million ap- propnsuon to develop a super sonic transport plane. The money is $00 million less than the total requested by Pres ident Nixon, approved by the House but rejected by the Sen ate. i The decision is sure to touch off a battle on the Senate floor where sens tors opposed to any SST spending have vowed a fili buster rather than allow the bill to become law. tha CSC wanted to have these elections with the fall elections, but they couldn't get their by laws straightened out on the qualifications until week before last. Bedinger said the Election Committee is taking what steps it can to insure an honest elec tion, even though it is by maB. He said nomination blanks wars mailed to all graduate students last week, and the committee will check student identification num bers against the name on each ballot in next week’s election. He added he doesn’t expect this to be much of a job, though, unless more graduate students vote than usual. STUDENT SENATE SECRETARY Bill HartsfMd presorts the student services fees, resolution at the Senate meeting Thursday ni*ht, as Vice President Roger Miller, left and Parliamentarian Michael Easmeyer listen. (Photo by Bob Cox) . Senate proposes new fees allocation system By BILL GOULD Battaiiea Staff Writer The Student. Senate Thursday night passed a resolution estab lishing s committee to make rec ommendations to the Senate re garding the assessment and al location of student services fses. The resolution originally was tabled for consideration at the Senate's next meeting in January. Senate Treasurer Eddie Ehiryea emphasized the urgency of the resolution, and after deliberation it was passed by a comfortable margin. * * Campus orgdhJsations or groups requesting money from the stu dent services fees would do so < through the proposed committee, under the new resolution. Ths committee will work with the administration and the Sen ate in making budget allocation recommendations. Also provided for in the resolution is a meeting between the university president and the Senate prior to approv ing the allocation of fees. Final action on tha rasolution will be taken at the next Senate meeting in January, following a conference! between Tom Cherry, university )rice president for bus iness sffaBs, and reprseentati' es of the Senate Executive Commit tee. Duryea also presented a report on expenses incurred ip selection of the Aggie Sweetheart Though all bills are not yet in, Duryea Mid that an estimated $700 had been spent A detailed report will be presented as soon as possible. Preliminary raeults of Opera tion Feedback wars discussed. Re sponse, while not as good as hop ed for, was still far greater than in previous attempts, according to Public Relations Chairman James O’Jibway. The Senate also passed a reso lution commending the “Good Guys" student group for its re cent community welfare project The students had repainted Travis Elementary School during the Bonfire weekend as an “alter native” to working on the Bon fire. Before peering the resolution, the Senate voted to delete the phrase “for thorn not wishing to work on the Bonfire activity", from the description of the proj ect's purpose Robert Riggs (sr-Arch), who proposed the resolution in its originial form, said he thinks the Senate “has once again practiced its well-known watering-down process.” Ben CUria psoxy for Murk Jarvis (aoph-Eng) and a member of the student group which ra- painted the school, said after the meeting the Senate had managed to “recogniM the group but evade the issues involved, as wall as the convictions and baliefs of the group.” The originator of the “Good Guys” group, David Darcus, said the Senate might possibly have missed the entire point of the group’s activity. "This was not just another service project, but a specific al ternative to working on the Bon fire. I am disappointed that the PMeed in hs amended form.” Summer ecology —ip , study announced A $39,177 National Science Foundation grant for a aix-waek summer institute on ecology bus been awarded Texas £AM Uni versity, President Jack K. Wil liams announced. The institute, directed by Dr. Richard J. Baldnuf of the Wild life Science Department, will be held July 6 to August 18 for 86 secondary school non-biology teachers. Baidauf Mid the institute will operate under the title "Popula tion, Resources and Environment: An Ecological Evaluation” with Dr. Donald R. Clark Jr. coordi nating it. Tha bask htea," Clark ax- plained, “will be to present prob lems mankind faces as being eco- logkal in nature. Participants will be given enough ecology to understand why the problems ex ist, hew Ore fit into them and what we can do about it." Mornings during the six-week institute will be devoted to dis- cuMioe groups, lectures and presentations by AAM faculty mambers in meteorology, ento mology, biology, geography, wildlife science and soils and crop sciences, among others. Clark addsd. Visiting lecturers will include Dr. LaMont Cola, ecologist of Cornell University, and • Dr. Georg (cq) Bergstrom, world food authority of Mkhigan State. Fisld trips to such sites as tha Houston Ship Channsl and Wmt Tanas bat caves also are planned. British specUlitt joins accounting R. Warwick Dobson, British specialist in management infor mation syatems, will join AAM’s Accounting Department aa “busi ness sxscutive in rssidonee" for the spring semester. Dean of Business Administra tion John E. Pearson said Dob son will conduct seminar* on both management information systems and distribution cost accounting. Bosh will be UN ambassador} to replace Yost, source says 12 receive rabies treatment D. A. of hands at th* Viet Crag." son anM. “We twee at the WASHINGTON —Taxaa Republican congressman George Bush will be th* next U.S. Am bassador to tho United Nations, a well informed source says. And, tha source said, San. Bob Dote of If anM a te tho front runner to re place Rap. Rogers C B. Morton, R-Md., as hand of th* Republi can National Committee. President N1 x • a announced night in his nationally month in a Senate bid, would re ceive a “high administration” feat Nixon said tha White HOaoo would dtedoee tho -peel- tiou Friday. Currant United Nations am- haaaadar, Chartaa Yost, has an nounced ha will resign trmm tha job. It was first learned Yost eras being fereed out at tfr* pant several weeks ago whan" teahed and thnt Freak Denial Patrick M ha named to the the picture te a »suytag Yost had bean unnecessarily hurt by pre mature disclosure he would be replaced. Moynihan will now return to a teaching job at Harvard Univer sity. Bush, a 46-year-old Yale sdu- eated two - term congressman from Taxes’ 7th District, was de tested in a hard-fought cam paign for tho Senate by Lloyd tlon that tho amiable, good Bush would ho named to rapMcr Morton as head at tha GOP Date had in th* Republican whan Morton was hand of Dole, a 87-year-old lawyer at Tanas Five students and seven staff members at Texas AAM University’s College of Veterinary Medicine are receiving the 14-