the Battalion Mbi nship have ath. •essei npioi beat week :ham. iment ' an- culty. Itural won 3 rec- de- iveral egm, )egan iskeb nday, :ham- next final play- A be- etball leg-an fan , son View have iraent lerry, game , two able ie on Cloudy and warm y 0 l. 67 No. 44 College Station, Texas Friday, November 12, 1971 Friday — Clear to partly cloudy. Southerly winds 10-15 mph. High 78°, low 54°. Saturday —; Partly cloudy. Southerly winds 10-12 mph. High 78°, low 61°. Houston Kickoff time — Partly cloudy. Southeasterly winds 10-12 mph. 76°. 60% relative humidity. 845-2226 Senate endorsement given to military aid WASHINGTON The Sen ile completed its two-step revival IV() tithe foreign aid program Thurs- k by passing a $1.5 billion mil itary aid measure. Before voting 65 to 24 to ap prove the bill, the Senate re stored $318 million to it in re sponse to a warning that reduc-* lions might jeopardize U. S. lithdrawal from Vietnam. Together with the $1.1 billion Konomic aid bill passed Wednes- „ "p" ray night, the military bill pro- lilies a $2.6 billion package in place of the $2.9 billion measure rejected just 13 days ago. unde- The bill now goes to the House S n, off campus beat Class which earlier this year voted $3.4 billion for the aid program, just $100 million below the Nixon ad ministration’s request. The immediate parliamentary path for the aid program still appears clouded—and funds may run out temporarily next Mon day. But the Senate action ap pears to assure the program will continue for now, though at a reduced level. The administration won a ma jor victory when the Senate voted 46 to 42 for an amendment by Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., chairman of the Armed Services Committee, to restore $318 mil lion cut by the Foreign Relations Committee. It rejected 46 to 43 a move to lower the bill’s $341 million spending ceiling on U.S. opera tions in Cambodia. But the bill, as passed, con tains Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield’s amendment calling for total U.S. withdrawal from Indochina within six months as well as a series of restrictions on the aid program opposed by the administration. Mansfield charged that, by ap proving $400 million more for arms aid than economic assist ance the Senate had put the emphasis of the aid program on “the weapons of destruction, on military might.” Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D- Ark., of the Foreign Relations Committee, who failed in a move to cut the arms aid program ear lier Thursday, said “I had hoped we would take a different ap proach and give emphasis to an-< other place.” A telephone call from Secretary of State William P. Rogers to Scott, promising that the admin istration would promptly spend $85 million in supporting assist ance for Israel, appeared to have helped carry the Stennis amend ment. Oceanography growing quickly HARRY MARSHALL Sljff Writer Pollution problems in the Gulf ([Mexico and studies of fishery productivity in the Antarctic Ocean are but two of the re search problems undertaken by tie Department of Oceanogra- The department conducts re search on a world-wide scale thile teaching the many-faceted science of oceanography to its students. “We have a faculty of 26 and suploy 110 other support person- Nlsuch as scientists and techni- Mns,” said Dr. R. A. Geyer, de triment head. The present fa-* iities are spread out over the etnpus in four buildings, Bizzell fall, Goodwin Hall, Olin E. league Research Center, and the library. “In the new Oceanography and Meteorology Building due to be ipleted next fall, we will have tet of the basement and seven Utors. This will let us expand •ur staff and give us many more tlassrooms and lecture plained Geyer. ‘When we get into the new Wding we will be able to offer ®eral new courses. Some of fee will be in cooperation with jbe College of Engineering which formulating a new curriculum a lled Ocean Engineering. This 'ill be the study of water and Sneering factors that apply to areas, the design and construction of structures in the water,” said Geyer. The oceanography curriculum is a graduate-study program. “There is not a specific, set undergraduate degree in ocean ography, because it is not a basic science. We draw on all sciences to do our work,” Geyer said. There are six sub-disciplines in the curriculum: biological, chemical, geological, geophysical, meteorological, and physical. The student chooses the one best suit ed to his interests and his quali fications. Most of the students come into the program with an undergraduate degree in science and no previous oceanographic training. The department is taking an active part in the Sea Grant Pro gram recently awarded to A&M. “Our part is mainly doing re search on specific oceanic prob lems for the program. It is ad ministered by the Center of Ma rine Resources,” said Geyer. “One of the problems we are working on now concerns the na tural oil seeps in the Gulf of Mexico. We are trying to ‘fin gerprint’ the key chemical char acteristics of this oil so when oil and tar deposits are found on the beaches, we can tell their origins. This way we can tell if the pol lution is man-made or a natural occurrence,” explained Geyer. Eight oil companies are also helping with this project. “We are doing research in the Wadel Sea in the Antarctic Ocean to study the productivity of fish eries. We can then apply much of this information to fish pro duction in the Gulf,” commented Geyer. Another major research pron gram the department is engaged in is the establishment of guide lines on pollution. “We are checking the concentrations of key pollutants in the ocean to set a baseline for future refer ence. Much of this is affected by the Mississippi River which carries pollutants into the Gulf. Then currents smear them all up and down the coast,” said Geyer. The present curriculum inte grates students’ textbook learn ing with research being done by the department. “The students work on their dissertations using information they have obtained from cruises on our research ships,” Geyer said. This provides the student with valuable experi ence. The department offers two undergraduate courses. These are 205, which is a one hour course designed to familiarize the stu dent with the field, and 401, which is a course to broaden the scientific knowledge of other science majors. Two ships are operated by the oceanography department for re search purposes. One operates in deep-water and is named the Alaminos. The other is a shal low-water craft and is named the Orca. The U.S. Navy is building a new ship for the department’s use. It will be ready in about 18 months. A new $200,000 staging area and maintenance facility is being built on Pellican Island to handle these ships. “The field of oceanography is expanding rapidly and the op portunities are excellen t,” stressed Geyer. Major areas of future development include under water habitation facilities, de sign of offshore loading and un loading facilities for ships with drafts too deep to come into con ventional ports, and the devel opment of new species of fish for food uses. The ocean is an un tapped natural resource of the future, said Geyer. A black’s view of the state government was presented Thursday afternoon by Rep. Cur tis Graves of Houston. Please see accompanying story. (Photo by Joe Matthews) Black representative Graves raps state government By SUE DAVIS News Editor The Texas Constitution has so restricted state legislators, it is almost impossible for them to do their job, Curtis Graves, black state representative from Hous ton, said Thursday. Speaking to an enthusiastic standing-room-only audience at a Political Forum presentation. Graves railed against the Texas government which he claims is in the hands of large corporations. “I may have been a little ahead of my time,” Graves said, when he fought for minimum wages for Mexican-Americans and for black history printed in the history books. “I may have been a little ahead of my time when I said we needed a two-party system in this state,” he added. Graves is a Democrat, but he said he would have no qualms about voting for a Repub lican. He believes people should vote for the man and not for the party. Graves continued that he may have been ahead of his time when he ran for mayor of Houston. He said he may have been ahead of his time when he said Gov. Preston Smith would make Texas a national laughing-stock or when he demanded earlier this year that Gus Mutscher, Tommy Shannon and Bill Heatly resign from their positions of authority because of the stock fraud scan dal. “I may he a little ahead of my time today when I say that the money - manipulated government of Texas is going to fall,” Graves said. “It’s time for us to get the government out of the hands of the big corporations and into the hands of the people.” Graves accused Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes of killing the redistricting bill in the Senate, forcing the job on a redistricting hoard. The new districts could then be drawn up the way Barnes, whom Graves re ferred to as “his eminence,” wanted them to be, he continued. The new districts were the “best example of gerrymandering ever seen in the deep South,” Graves said. Referring to Barnes, Graves commented, “All of us should do everything we can to see that that kind of politician is not re turned to office.” “I think we will see a sweep ing out” of the state government, Graves said, after the stock scan dal. He added that perhaps Tex as should have more scandals pe riodically to clean out the govern ment. Graves commented that he saw nothing wi*ong with a college pro fessor holding a public office. “I think it’s high time we got some intelligent people in of fice,” he said. Graves believes the regulatory agencies appointed by the gover nor should be reformed. They should contain a certain amount of lay people, rather than mem bers of the industry they are supposed to regulate, and that their terms should coincide with that of the governor, he said. Hayden argues treatment of contemporary Indians Flea market benefit planned for Mental Health Center ^mittee. (Photo by Joe Matthews) White elephant booths, pony rides, and cake sales will high light the Flea Market benefit be ing held November 20 in front of the Mental Health Center (Old St. Joseph Hospital) in Bryan. Over 15 different organizations have planned to sponsor events for the benefit, including the American Legion Auxiliary ^159, the Brazos Area Volunteers, St. Paul Methodist Church, the LU- LAC Councils ^229 and ^622, the V.F.W. Auxiliary 4692, the El Club Social, the Pythian Sis ters, Tau Epsilon Beta Sigma Phi, Upsilom Rho Beta, Omega Phi Alpha, the Mental Health Center employes, V.F.W. Post 4692, V.F.W. Auxiliary Post 4377, and the Bryan Rodeo Co. The organizations are sponsor ing food stands, cake sales, a country store, children’s rides and many other competitive games. Also, many organizations are donating items for sale. Individ uals wanting to donate articles such as garage sale items should bring them to the center No vember 15 or 16 from 9 a.m. till 4 p.m. Persons that would like theib items picked up should call 822-1355. The public is invited and urged to participate in The Flea Mar ket benefit. The El Club Social will also sponsor a Mexican din ner at Anson Jones High School on November 21 from 11:30 till 2 p.m. Admission is $1.50 for adults and $.75 for children. Baylor, A&M will cooperate in grad program A formal agreement to cooper ate in graduate programs has been approved by officials of Baylor College of Medicine and A&M. The agreement is part of a previously announced overall en deavor for the two institutions to cooperate in fields of mutual interest, including comparative medicine and allied health career development. “Purpose of this cooperative agreement is to achieve more ef-* fective utilization of the gradu ate resources of A&M and Bay lor College of Medicine in meet ing the needs of graduate stu dents enrolled in either or both of the two institutions,” states the formal agreement. By ROD SPEER Staff Writer lola Hayden, a Comanche, re turned to the former hunting grounds of her people to lecture in Thursday night’s Great Issues presentation. “I’ve come to see the property that you’ve kept for me all these years,” she said. Hayden is the executive direc tor of the Americans for Indian Opportunity. She is an arden supporter of having more Indians in the Bureau of Indian Affairs and has worked to improve eco nomical and educational oppor tunities for the American Indian. Hayden’s talk dealt with In dians in contemporary society. Her audience was small due to the conflict with Political Forum and the A&M-Tech freshman football game. The sounds of the contest could be heard in the background throughout the lec ture. “It is a mistake to lump all 200 Indian cultures in America into one category,” Hayden em phasized. It is because of the great cultural and linguistic dif ferences among Indians, she feels, that the American Indian has not been able to organize like the blacks. Hayden contends that govern ment legislation is geared to the reservation Indian even though half of the one million American University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. Indians don’t live on reservations. “A love-hate relationship ex ists between the Indian and the Bureau of Indian Affairs,” she said. “On the one hand Indians hate the BIA because it doesn’t do what we want it to do and yet we’re dependent on it and couldn’t live without it.” Hayden would like to see the BIA taken out of the Department of the In terior. She feels that there is a conflict of interests between the conversational aspect of the De partment of the Interior and the economic requirements of the In dians. Hayden admitted that the American Indian has experienced a cultural breakdown. “The whites told the Indian to abandon his religion for Christianity, to quit speaking his language, to cut his hair and to, essentially, quit being an Indian,” she said. Hayden attributes Indian women with saving what little is left of their original cultures. Hayden is critical of the way that textbooks present Indian his tory. A recent study, she said, has shown that young Indians have actually become ashamed of their race because of the dis torted picture the textbooks give. Her organization is now involved in seeking Indian authors to write eight elementary textbooks. “Schools with high Indian ratios badly need books,” she added. “The dropout rate with Indian children is about 70 per cent,” Hayden said. She is trying to develop Indian youth councils within high schools to help re duce the dropout rate. Hayden criticized the govern ment’s attempt to relocate In dians from reservations to urban areas in the 1950’s. She called the effort a “total failure.” Hay den mentioned that the man who planned the relocation also planned the concentration camps for Japanese-Americans during World War II. During the question-and-an- swer period Hayden said that res ervations should not be abolished but should be made good places to live. “The Indians, like all other groups, desire a homeland — no matter how bad it is,” she said. “It is like the Jews desire to go to Israel,” she added. Ida Hayden