be Battalion Cloudy and warmer at tU 1‘if, m U P aJ , HurriJ I 1 ', J ninutesl |lied | 11*1 brhoiisJ pe | pi aul pod dJ matcll for J Id witj | ni arginJ . Clej.j theiJ J Fourl led A;J pe leail iressivfl jeh foil les costl lortuniJ offenstj ty had I it the I sion iil et thil night I M time.! \y 0 l 67 No. 55 College Station, Texas Wednesday, December 8, 1971 Thursday — Cloudy. Intermit tent rainshowers. Southerly winds 10-15 mph. High 68°, low 49°. Friday — Partly cloudy. West erly winds 10-15 mph. High 66°, low 42°. 845-2226 m s W X U.N. adopts resolve asking a cease-fire / p,. \ X, \ r Mi V \ \ y How-1 Rick l; Boh-1 VfcKeyi Arci-| y, 1- Larry I 17; Joel yer, 5; ie Me- IS SIGN SCRIBBLED ON THE WALL of the Architecture building- indicates not eryone is forced to spend everything he makes because of rising prices. Why do :hitects know so much about economics? (Photo by Joe Matthews) UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. <•£*)—The U.N. General Assembly called on India and Pakistan Tuesday night to order an im mediate cease-fire and to with draw their troops to their own territories. The action came 24 hours after the Security Council acknowl edged its inability to deal with the problem, because of Soviet vetoes, and handed it to the veto- free assembly. The assembly vote was 104 to 11, with 10 abstentions. The cease-fire resolutions car ried no binding force, but its sponsors expressed hope the In dian and Pakistani leaders would bow to it as a reflection of world opinion. The adopted resolution was basically the same as the one killed by a Soviet veto in the Security Council on Monday night. The assembly debate began Tuesday morning and continued through the afternoon and eve ning. It was marked, as the Security Council debate had been, by a sharp exchange between Communist China and the Soviet Union. Peking’s deputy foreign min ister, Chiao Kuan-hua, noted a statement carried by the Soviet news agency Tass to the effect that the fighting involved Soviet Wot ‘all bad A&M laundry has advantages A&M Civilian students unable Set a residence hall change tting pre-registration will have "other opportunity Dec. 8-10. Students may request a differ- r oom or hall by reporting to F Housing Office by 5 p.m. 11 bee. 10, Housing Mana- "Allan M. Madeley announced. 11 y civilian students pre-reg- A&M’s laundry service gives «student many advantages not Wed at other universities,” ording to George Hartsock, M’s laundry manager. Hartsock feels the service is Gnomical as well as time-saving, s recent experiment an average M student laundry bundle was wssed at an off-campus laun- where it cost $6.50 compared 51.47 per week paid for A&M’s pndry service. The other laun- takes three to four days to 'nder clothes while Aggies wait ly a day. A&M laundry management a ® a study of other such serv es and found that very few , exas diversities provide any l( i of laundry service at all. the ones that do, none have service like A&M’s. North Texas 1 te charges $18 per semester ‘"lean two sheets, a pillow case, three towels and a utility cloth, while A&M collects $25 per se mester to launder 36 items per week. The University of Texas supplies and cleans linens while providing washaterias. The A&M laundry is required to meet certain standards set by the American Institute of Laun dry of which it is a member. The institute checks its members by sending a load of clothes, treated with certain stains, which is to be washed 20 times and sent back. The items are then examined to determine if colors have been faded and what degree of white ness has been lost from white items. According to Hartsock, A&M’s results have been in the “excellent” range and only oc casionally fall to the “good” cate gory. The laundry’s policy toward damaged clothing has changed ii'ilian students are given chance for dorm changes istered for the TAMU spring semester 1972 or blocked by the dean may get on the waiting list. Madeley said the list will be processed on a first-come, first- served basis. Students requesting changes during the period should check with the office before leaving on the semester break. oster is re-elected to head 1P0 during spring semester ^ale Foster of Bryan has been •elected with a slate of 12 offi- i t0 he ad Alpha Phi Omega at during the spring semester. i>elt >S * er WaS 0ne seven Xi a chapter members returned 0 bee in the national service , ernit y. APO elects officers c semester to provide extra ership opportunities. ’ Delta also activated 18 f?es for full membership. The ^ 0U P will have its semester ban- * Saturday, after working as ^mencement ushers that morn- Mth Ce pres 'dents elected to serve ^Hoster are administration, University National Bank Un the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. Tommy Weaver of Waco; mem bership, Mike Bunch of Merced, Calif., and projects, Milton Niel sen, Austin. Other officers are treasurer Branon Dunn, San Antonio; gen eral secretary, JohnSempe, Hous ton; alumni secretary, David Mc- Lellan, Orange; historian, Vernon Bartle, Center; pledgemaster, Mike Kelley, Houston; property custodian, Burl Summrall, Aus tin; sergeant-at-arms, John King, Corpus Christi, and chaplain, Larry Bailey, Richardson. Weaver, Dunn, Sempe, McLel- lan, King and Bailey were elected to second terms. Merrill Mitchell, freshman lib eral arts major of Bryan, was selected chapter sweetheart. She is an Omega Phi Alpha pledge. this year. In the past if an item was ripped in the laundry process a note was sent to the owner along with the damaged article requesting he come to settle his claim. Now the laundry retains the damaged item and waits for the student to take the initiative to come look for it. “In this case,” said Hartsock, “an attempt is made to fix the article and up to 50 per cent is given to the student as a damage claim.” If a student wishes to make a claim on an item sent back in his bundle, the money-collection process becomes more compli cated. The laundry sends the article in question to the Ameri can Institute of Laundry which makes laboratory tests on it to determine the nature of the dam age and whether or not the stu dent was mistaken in his claim. So far this year $181 has been paid to students in claims. Hart sock considers this figure rela tively low compared to other such services of this size around the country. Currently only 25 to 30 mis placed articles without identifi cation marks are at the laundry office. Hartsock feels that the main cause of lost clothing is due to loose laundry bags sub mitted at the sub-stations. “When loose pieces without marks fall out of bags it is dif ficult to return clothing to the owner,” he said. To worsen the problem, he added, students sometimes fail to fill out their laundry checklist.” “To make sure that a student’s socks, which are not marked, are not lost they are washed and dried in individual bags,” Hart sock commented. A&M’s laundry process begins in the pick-up sub stations. From there the laundry bags are “checked-in” by checking the student item list with what ac tually is in the bag. The clothes are then transported to the clas sifying department where they are sorted. Laundry is then di vided into eight categories: lin ens, general white items, general colored items, blue jeans, white shirts, colored shirts, white ‘T’ shirts and sta-press trousers. Colored ‘T’ shirts that are to be worn on the outside and knit shirts are classified with sta- press trousers. Colored ‘T’ shirts that look like inside ‘T’ shirts fall in the category with general colored items. General white items are washed in 170°F water and general colored articles in 110°F water. According to Hartsock, only dry bleach, which is safer but more expensive than liquid bleach, is used. Only one ounce is added to 100 lbs. of clothing. “We use just enough to re move stains that couldn’t be re moved otherwise,” he said. The machinery the laundry uses is relatively new, being only two years old. “The fully-automated machines wash 200 bundles at a time,” Hartsock boasted. During Sep tember and October the laundry processed over 1,300,000 pieces of laundry. Over 8,000 blue jeans alone are washed and pressed each week. The A&M laundry has a few employes who have been with the service as long as 25 years. Although the laundry has some trainees, no students work there. The turnover is very high among its “nine-month” employes who are laid-off during the Christ mas and summer recesses. These workers often begin looking for more permanent employment as the holidays approach. There are 68 “nine-month” workers and 46 “twelve-month” ones who usually stay with the laundry for years. New laundry policies are often the result of suggestions made by the Student Laundry Service Committee of the Civilian Stu dent Council. “We try to do all the committee recommends,” Hartsock emphasized. Due to a backload of clothes last month the committee sug gested the laundry adopt a two- day return schedule. The policy went into effect but was ill-re ceived by the student body. “Now we sometimes have to work overtime but we manage to get all the bundles back in a day,” Hartsock said. Monday the committee ap proved a new policy which will take effect next semester. Stu dents will not be restricted to a certain specified number of shirts, pants, pillow cases, sheets and small “.03” items. Instead they will be allowed to choose any combination of clothes with out a charge whose laundry price does not add up to over $1.47. Hartsock is against having an optional laundry system where the students register for the service at the beginning of each semester. “I feel that if it were put to a vote the students would vote against it,” he said. security because of its proximity to the borders of the U.S.S.R. “This is blackmail and a menace to China as well as all the neighboring countries of In dia and Pakistan,” Chiao said. “Distinguished Soviet represen tative, what exactly are you planning to do? You might as well tell us here.” He repeated his charge that “the Soviet government is the boss behind the Indian aggres sion.” Soviet Ambassador Jacob A. Malik accused China of voting against a Soviet resolution in the Security Council “simply be cause it was Soviet.” “This,” Malik said, “was remi niscent of the worst days of the cold war.” He , again labeled the Peking representatives as “social trai tors.” The speeches in the assembly generally stressed the need for speed in view of the large-scale fighting. India and the Soviet Union made a half-hearted effort to delay the debate by insisting that the questions should be referred first to the assembly’s steering committee. They declined to press the matter, however, when the assembly president, Adam Malik of Indonesia, ruled against them. In an effort to speed a decision, Malik placed a 10-minute time limit on all speakers except those of India and Pakistan. Meetings were scheduled for the morning, afternoon and evening Tuesday and for the morning and after noon Wednesday. At the start of the Tuesday afternoon meeting, Secretary- General U Thant took his seat on the assembly podium for the first time since going to a hos pital Nov. 2 with a duodenal ulcer. He appealed “to all the parties to the conflict ... to take every possible measure to spare the lives of the innocent civilian population” and to prevent “sacri fice of human lives on a vast scale.” The proposal before the assembly was the same one vetoed in the Security Council by the Soviet Union on Sunday night. It was brought to the 131-nation body by the same eight countries which sponsored it in the council. They were joined by four others to raise the sponsorship to 12. They were Argentina, Belgium, Burundi, Italy, Japan, Nicara gua, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Spain, Ghana, Indonesia and Tunisia. Nearly all speakers stressed the need for urgent action. Tu nisian Ambassador Rachid Driss said “we should remain here until we reach a decision.” Ghana’s R. M. Akwei said the Security Council deadlock was one more example of the United Nation’s incapacity to act. U.S. Ambassador George Bush said the delegates should not try to assess the blame for the fight ing between India and Pakistan, but should seek to end the blood shed. “Our task,” he said “is to bring at this point in history the in fluence of the United Nations to bear in order to restore condi tions of peace which are essen tial for progress toward a politi cal settlement.” Kennedy hits U. S. stand on India, Pakistan war WASHINGTON )_Sen. Ed ward M. Kennedy, D.-Mass., sharply attacked President Nix on’s handling of the India-Paki- stan crisis Tuesday. Kennedy charged the crisis started with Pakistani suppression of East Bengal last March rather than the steps taken by India last week. Kennedy said in a Senate speech that the administration has re fused over the past eight months to condemn “the brutal and sys tematic repression of East Bengal by the Pakistan Army” yet now is condemning “the response of India towards an increasingly desperate situation on its eastern borders.” “Certainly condemnation is justified,” Kennedy said, asking “but what should we condemn? “We should condemn, Mr. President, the silence of our leadership,” he went on, accusing the administration of months of “deference to Pakistani sensibili ties” followed now by denuncia tion of India. He also linked the U.S. stand to the Nixon administration’s efforts for closer relations with China, which backs Pakistan in the present crisis. “This administration has right ly taken pride in its efforts to re-establish contact with one- fifth of mankind’s population in China,” he said. “But are we going to simultaneously alienate one-sixth of mankind in India— a democratic nation with whom we have had years of productive relations?” He called for an immediate stand-still cease-fire on all fronts under international auspices, im- AF Gen. Meyer to officer commission Gen. John C. Meyer, vice chief of staff of the U. S. Air Force, will deliver the commissioning address at A&M during Dec. 11 ceremonies at which senior cadets will become second lieutenants. America’s leading fighter ace in Europe during World War II, General Meyer is second in com mand of the entire U. S. Air Force. He is the second four star Air Force general to be commission ing officer and speaker at TAMU this year. The top Air Force officer, Gen. John D. Ryan, was here last May. Army and Air Force ROTC cadets completing the four-year program and to receive bachelor degrees at the Saturday morning commencement will be sworn in as new officers at the afternoon commissioning, according to A&M Commandant Col. Thomas R. Parsons. Col. Robert F. Cross land, TAMU’s ranking Air Force officer and professor of aerospace studies, will participate. In addition to awarding com missions and addressing the new officers, General Meyer will be reviewing officer for a special re view honoring President Emeri tus M. T. Harrington. Former commander of Tactical Air Command’s 12th Air Force at Waco, General Meyer has headed several major bomber and interceptor units of the Strategic Air Command and Air Defense Command as well as fighter mediate and simultaneous talks between India and Pakistan and Pakistan and East Bengal and revival of the United Nations relief mission in East Bengal. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D.- Maine, issued a statement calling for steps to end the conflict rather than efforts “to sit in judgement” between the two war ring powers. Despite official claims of neu trality, he said that the United States failed to end economic aid to Pakistan, branded India as an aggressor, withdrew economic aid commitments to India without taking similar action with regard to Pakistan and called for a cease-fire that “would leave in place the Pakistani troops that have oppressed the people of East Bengal.” deliver address squadrons of the Tactical Air Command. Recognized as one of the Air Force’s most able officers, he also served on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, lastly as operations direc tor before becoming Air Force vice chief of staff. A 32-year veteran. General Meyer also served in 1948 as the Secretary of the Air Force’s principal point of contact with the U. S. House of Representa tives. The Brooklyn, N. Y., native led the 487th Fighter Squadron into World War II combat in the European theater. Meyer par ticipated in several major cam paigns, including Ardennes-Al- sace, Northern France and Rhine land. receive ROTC cadets to allowances increases in Official notification has been received at A&M that retroactive subsistence allowance increases have been granted for Army and Air Force ROTC cadets. Both houses of Congress and the President approved the meas ure to raise cadet subsistence allowance from $50 to $100 per month. The law also raised the number of scholarships per serv ice by 1,000 to 6,500. Air Force Col. Robert F. Cross land received word of the sub sistence increase from Air Uni versity at Maxwell AFB, Ala. The 5th U. S. Army Head quarters, Fort Sam Houston, notified Army Col. Thomas R. Parsons of the new pay rates. Affected by the measure are contract junior and senior cadets and holders of service scholar ships, which also pay for tuition, fees and books in addition to the non-taxable subsistence. Colonel Parsons, commandant, said the new subsistence allow ance will be received by about 1,000 TAMU cadets. It is retro active to Nov. 14 and the end of the wage-price freeze. Non-scholarship cadets and stu dents interested in the expanded scholarship availability should contact Maj. Roy Avant about the Army ROTC program or Capt. Pat Corbett on the Air Force ROTC program. The law which raised the num ber of scholarships also provides that 20 per cent of the awards may be allocated to cadets in the two-year program that 50 per cent of the scholarship cadets must qualify for in-state tuition rates.