The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 02, 1971, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE BATTALION
Page 2 College Station, Texas Tuesday, March 2, 1971
CADET SLOUCH
by Jim Earle
UT chairman backs
more university power
tc
AUSTIN UP) — A university
president should have the power
to order off campus any person
he thinks is bent on disrupting
the school, Frank Erwin, chair
man of the University of Texas
system regents, said Monday.
Erwin testified before the
House Criminal J urisprudence
Committee on a series of camp
us unrest bills introduced by Rep.
Dean Cobb of Dumas.
Cobb said the president of
Prairie View A&M, Dr. A. I.
Thomas, told him the bills are the
tools Thomas needed last week to
curtail the burning of Prairie
View buildings.
“Eight known agitators that
came from other areas of the
state or from out of state were
involved in events at Prairie
View prior to the burnings,” Cobb
said.
Dr. Pat Nicholson, vice presi
dent of the University of Hous
ton, supported Cobb’s bill author
izing the banning of “trouble
makers” from campus for up to
14 days.
“We think it is fair legislation.
It is not repressive,” Nicholson
said.
“The only reason I can figure for us being in the dark
is that it makes it easy for Earle to draw a cartoon!!”
The bill was referred to a sub
committee.
Another bill by Cobb would al
low school security guards to de
mand the identification and busi-
News reports of Laos war
slanted, Pentagon asserts
WASHINGTON <A») — A Pen
tagon official criticized Monday
the news accounts of the allied
offensive in Laos, asserting they
are focusing on South Vietna
mese defeats rather than suc
cesses.
In discussing with newsmen
the abandonment of South Viet
namese fire bases in Laos, the
spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim,
said:
“I think it hasn’t always been
reported that they (the South
Vietnamese) had moved into 10
or 12 or 14 various places and
the only thing I seem to see re
ported is that they have moved
out of two or three places.”
Could it be, a reporter said,
that correspondents in South
Vietnam weren’t kept fully ad
vised of all South Vietnamese
operations ?
Friedheim replied that report
ers “have been rather thoroughly
taken into conferences” with
South Vietnamese and U. S. mili
tary commanders, and added:
“It just seems to me that the
emphasis has been on places they
(the South Vietnamese) have left
rather than places they went.”
Friedheim. deputy assistant
cific news organizations.
Until Thursday, the U.S. com
mand in Vietnam barred Ameri
can correspondents from flying
into Laos aboard U. S. helicop
ters by invoking a Defense De
partment regulation that bars
government aircraft from com
peting with commercial airlines
in international flights.
ness of anybody on campus. It
drew mostly critical questions
from the committee last week.
“These bills are not going to
be used against people walking
on campus looking at trees and
birds,” Erwin said.
He recalled the demonstration
on the Austin campus last spring
that “resulted in a march in the
capitol and the breaking of wind
ows and terrorizing of capitol
employes, and a pitched battle
with police at the foot of the
grounds here.”
Nine fires have been set in uni
versity buildings in the last two
years, Erwin said.
“These are not fanciful things,”
he said.
Guards on the university tower
can identify known troublemak
ers through binoculars, he said.
Cobbs’ bills would give univer
sity officials the power to control
these people, he said.
Under present law, “they can
tell you to go fly a kite, that
it’s public property. Ask them
who they are, and they give you
some more four-letter words,” he
said.
On the identification bill, Er
win said “a bunch of bearded
people” came up to ROTC stu
dents last fall and sbot them with
water pistols.
Their identities remained un
known until officials received a
photograph of the episode, he
said.
“Unfortunately, it turned out
four of thhem were teaching as
sistants at the university,” he
said.
Asked if the teachers still were
at the university, Erwin said:
“They are not, but we are being
threatened by the AAUP (Ameri
can Association of University
Professors) for violating their
academic freedom.”
doned as weapons to maintain
order on campus. The U. S. 5th
Circuit Court of Appeals has laid
down nine steps that must be fol
lowed before expulsion can be en
forced, he said.
“They (troublemakers) take us
to federal court on everything,”
Erwin said. Nine suits are pend
ing against him now, he said.
“And the American Civil Lib
erties Union apparently has an
unlimited supply of lawyers to
defend them,” he said.
After Erwin finished, Rep.
Billy Williamson of Tyler said:
“In East Texas my people say,
‘Thank God for Frank Erwin’.”
“Thank you. There's some dif
ferent views,” Erwin said.
Williamson said students are
being used by “subversive ele
ments to destroy our educational
institutions.”
Also referred to subcommittee
was a Cobb bill that would au
thorize a school to order a stu
dent dismissed for disruptive ac
tivities to stay off campus for a
DIP and DAB SHOP
Art Plaster, Large Selection Statuary and Wall Plaques,
Greenware and Finished
Hours: 6 to 9 p. m. — Monday thru Friday all day-Saturde:
206 So. Gordon Brj “
year.
$MU ANNOUNCES
SUMMER SCHOOL IN AUSTNi
July 7 - August 25
University of Graz
Six Hours Credit
Field Trips to Eastern European Countries
Curriculum includes Political Science, Sociology, Religion,
Music, History, Literature, Economics, Psychology, EdutaS#
and German. The courses emphasize Balkan, Russian, and Ee
Central European Studies.
This program is open to students in good standing at Ai
respective colleges or universities.
The cost is $850 which includes a two day orientation
Washington, D.C., round trip jet fare, tuition, room, breakfa
and field trips.
For applications and further information contact:
Dr. Fred Bryson
Director, International Programs
Southern Methodist University
Dallas, Texas 75222
Bulletin Board
, deputy
secretary of defense for public
affairs, did not identify any spe-
However, no commercial air
line and few Vietnamese helicop
ters were available to take re
porters into the battle area. The
restrictions were not invoked
during the Cambodian incursion
last May.
2:30
3:00
3:30
3 (5)
3 (5)
4:00
4:30
5:30
Numbers in ( ) denote
channels on the cable.
3 (5) Edge of Night
15 (12) Sesame Street
(PBS) (Repeat
of Monday)
Corner Pyle
Town Talk
15 (12) University
Instructional
That Girl
Bewitched
What’s New
(NET)
General Hospital
15 (12) Misterogers’
Neighborhood
(NET)
CBS News
Sesame Street
(PBS)
6:00 3 (5)
6:30 3 (5)
15 (12)
7:00 3 ( 5)
15 (12)
7:30 3 (5)
15 (12)
3 (5)
3(5)
15 (12)
5:00 3 (5)
8:30 3 (5)
15 (12)
9:00 3 (5)
15 (12)
Evening News
Beverly Hillbillies
Campus and Com
munity Today
Green Acres
Know Your
Antiques (ETS)
Hee Haw
The Turned on
Crisis (PBS)
All in the Family
Viewpoint
Secretary of Defense Melvin
R. Laird announced Thursday the
restrictions had been lifted and
U. S. newsmen would now be per
mitted aboard American helicop
ters.
Erwin said suspension and ex
pulsion have been virtually aban-
TONIGHT
E. T. Society will meet at 7:30
p.m. in room 104 of the M.E.
Shops to elect officers for next
year.
AHE will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
room 207 of the Engineering
Building to hear a talk on logis
tics and transportation.
WEDNESDAY
Semper Fidelis Society will
meet at 7:30 p.m. on the front
steps of the MSC to have Aggie-
land pictures taken.
SCOPE will meet at 7:30 p.m.
in room 3B of the MSC to plan
for Earth Day.
Host and Fashion Committee
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 2A
of the MSC to select a new
executive committee and discuss
coming events.
Error brings
son, threat of
damage suit
Marcus Welby, MD
The Advocates
(PBS)
3(5)
15 (12)
10:00 3 (5) Final News
15 (12) The Black Journal
(NET)
10:30 3 (5) Movie—Yuma
LANSING, Mich. 6P) _ The
State Appeals Court has ruled a
couple can sue for damages in a
case where a Detroit wife was
supplied with a tranquilizer rath
er than an oral contraceptive by
a pharmacist and became the
mother of a son.
Bingo-Weekdays at 5, BCS*TV/9. Nothing to
buy. You need not be present to win.
The appeals court held Wayne
County Circuit Judge Joseph Ra
shid did not rule correctly in Jan
uary 1969 when he dismissed the
complaint by the plaintiffs on
the grounds that whatever dam
ages they suffered was more than
offset by the benefit of their
having another healthy child.
Cbt Battalion
Opinions expressed in The Battalion are those o]
the student writers only. The Battalion is a non-tax-
supported, non-profit, self-supporting educational enter
prise edited and operated by students as a university and
community newspaper.
a student newspaper at Texas A&M, is
dai.
—- ^ SeP*
May, and once a week during summer school.
The Battalion
published in Colli
Sund
ege Station, Texas, daily except Saturday,
lay, Monday, and holiday periods, September through
LETTERS POLICY
Letters to the editor must be typed, double-spaced,
and no more than 300 words in length. They must be
signed, although the writer’s name will be withheld by
arrangement with the editor. Address correspondence to
Listen Up, The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building,
College Station, Texas 77843.
MEMBER
The Associated Press, Texas Press Association
The Associated Collegiate Press
Mail
ear;
ales
sales tax. Advertising rate furnished on request.
The Battalion, Room 217, Services Building, College Station,
Texas 77843.
the use for
not
Members of the Student Publications Board are: Jim
Lindsey, chairman; H. F. Filers, College of Liberal Arts;
F. S. White, College of Engineering; Dr. Asa B. Childers, Jr.,
spontaneous
of all
F. S. White, College of Engineering; Dr. Asa B. Childers, Jr.,
College of Veterinary Medicine; Dr. Z. L. Carpenter, College
of Agriculture; and Roger Miller, student.
l r»biS£ d A“ e sassair a-anas
matter herein are also reserved.
Second-Class postage paid at College Station, Texas.
Servi
Franc
Represented nationally by National Educational Advertising
dees, Inc., New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and San
acisco.
EDITOR DAVID MIDDLEBROOKE
Assistant Editor Hayden Whitsett
Managing Editor Fran Zupan
Women’s Editor Sue Davis
Sports Editor Clifford Broyles
Going Overseas This Summer?
WANT SOME MONEY?
Applications for the MSC Overseas Loan Fund are
available now thru March 5 in the
Director’s Office of the MSC.
a project of the MSC Travel Committee
FIGHT POLLUTION ! !
JOIN
SCOPE
Student Council On Pollution and Environment
< i ,..(!.»** A .7 JvjTV ... ■ \ y *
★ ★ ★
Special Meeting Wed., March 3
Room 3B, Memorial Student Center, 7:30 p. m.
• Information For Prospective Members
Talk With
Ciordon Richardson
Our Provident Mutual Pro At
Texas A&M
707 University Drive
FOB
BE!
battal
0
SAD)
for w
OR FOI
FOR '
BRIN(
NI
We loan
of valui
requirec
The I is alive
The I . . . the individual essence . .. that
thing in you that makes you unlike anyone else.
That’s alive at Provident Mutual.
It flourishes here because a strong sense of
identity is what we need in young people. It’s what
we look for. You can’t be a successful agent withouti
A successful agent must be his own man. He
must make his own decisions for the sake of his own
clients, who become, in effect, his own business.
No way to do this without
^ p U 1 1W / ////////^ a li ve jy I. Think about it.
Think about this, too: 22%
^ of our most successful
^ agents started learning
S and earning while still
r in college. And while
~ you’re thinking, why
I
Your g
golf cl
record
tools,
tape de<
WE Wj 5
8 TRA
ANY (
VALUf
1014’
tv
^ not visit our campus
• Anti - Pollution Film
• Plans For EARTH DAY, April 22
★ ★ ★
SCOPE, P. O. Box GK, College Station, 77840
Looking for a mind-expander?
Modernistic operations room of HL&P’s new Energy
Control Center.
We have one! The challenge of providing
electric power to 5,600 square miles of one
of the nation’s fastest growing metropolitan
areas—the Houston Gulf Coast. It’s a
dynamic community, requiring the best
of mind and talent to meet the demands
of a brilliant future.
At Houston Lighting & Power Company,
our biggest challenge is to see how far
ahead we can think and plan—to be ready
for the area’s needs before they arise.
A few examples of our preparation for
today and tomorrow are the revolutionary,
computerized Energy Control Center;
instantaneous data recall Customer
Information System; the Southwest’s
largest, most modern power generating
equipment.
If you’d like to be part of this growth,
contact us for an interview: Engineers—
Electrical, Mechanical, Chemical;
Salesmen, Accountants, Mathematicians,
Secretaries, Business Administration
and Liberal Arts Graduates.
Houston Lighting & Power Company
An equal opportunity employer
The Livv
quired of
majoring
March 10,
of the Che
conault n
Building f
PEANUTS
oi-
By Charles M. Sd
SOMETIMES IT'S EASY TO 6ET
dOGGEP DOWN ON THESE REPORTS
THERE ARE NO OCEANS IN
KANSAS ..THERE ARE NO OCEANS
IN NEBRASKA..THERE ARE NO
OCEANS IN NEVADA ..THERE ARE
NO OCEANS IN MINNESOTA./'
" THERE ARE NO OCEANS IN
IOWA.. THERE ARE.. "
I TH006HT VOU WANTED
TO 60 IN TO DETAIL...
Hs
C«
Pre
We st
Where
Qu
Whe«
Sr
Wa.
Aim
Bral
2
o-
1.-.v. rSSSMNR .••.w.v,.-..--.
■ - w v. -
, ■.tY/VV^'T * '• VT-V- * * - *