ICPJUL* CFNTE*. lac .0, BOX 4543b A *LLX* # Til, 75233 Battalion WBDNBSDAY — No Dm Hma Evor Bom Hoard Of. Wko Could Outsmart Honesty. THrRSDAY — HJ»fc «f SI Vot «7 College Station, Texas Tuesday, March 13, 1973 845-2226 Briscoe, Senate Strike Down Moves For New Texas Colleges r«sv after rear rHamben of bf Sea. Jobs In tWir town. br two-thirds of tko Board. Tho bill would not affart pay far them yes aaat Had chamber of ommerrs men We have created so of them can by Hobby. Stable ay- bills S>—> be de bated before tbs general pnation bill, which is stil that I think we adulation Is net If that growth to be do to tie the hands of and largely an te an an eady te Lt Gee. MS Hobby end tbs SsnsU “Fetors growth moot be essrdi- Tbto Klrphant Bowl Charity Game Raises $630 The Elephant Bawl Football gases at Taxes ASM yredneed the right te act sretien of over-bniMteg. ever- f r h “ r ’ ly •f®*- • tiorr sway from i >» tele s# tbs atodsnt sosnt ln.1., .wi te pass on anything Is ds with higher education te this state." said Sea. H. 1. Blanchard. !• I.ubhr* k Later Brteree told a of prirat* of Tex as that “Ws ranast afford eem- pstition far the higher education tax dollar by unnecessary proltf- itsd and it must dicta by ^ Kigber sducattei^ away from .tarring *nd over financmg is nsads of our stats as a thr mn4 puu It in the . r mane mg Kste." . . ‘ , In aartlsr action Tusada Conags aad I'nivsreity System, he given seen mars power te It la the of as agency. , . . This to ■oeetficailv that J** *" affort to craaU a more Texas torium oa callsgas “ ISM." rag- Ws>e got to do la earlier action Teooday, a affart to deha to a bill that would tot the Texas AAI University branch at La rads of fer graduate rearxea was blacked by a parliamentary paiat of The March 1 game at Kyle Field crunched te a 0-0 tie he- twasa Army and Air Farce fit game will be te the elate the growth of state collages said Sen. Chartaa Herring. D- order. When Sen. Bill Meier, D- v Hch.bihuuon < cn and oaivireNiw A ostia, te tbs Senate dab—. Inteas, pretested that tbs MU. ssrwnsmy tbs week after Trinity Project Election Fails To Get Needed Votes TAMU’S spring Tbs 1971 by Wings aad Sahara, of military ocbel- and Carps of Ca- the TAMU Athletic Ds| A I>OOKIf4c. LIKE A GEYSER ht eruption, a 12-inch water pipe let loose with all iU fnry Turnday afternoon at the corner of S. College Ave. and Rizzell St. where workers were digging a cable canal for stoplights being erected at the intersection Job super intendent Don Hartman of the Alder Electric Co. said initial plum mage of the ‘geyser* about 100 feet and took about 46 minutes to shut off. Kyles Make State With 15,000-Acre History Land Gift Mr and Mrs. Sid M. Kyis sf Tbs land to located in Laving Pecos haws given AAM mars than County aad borders on Now Mox- 14,Set acres of land in one of the too. largest gifts sf its type in the la addition te the II, history sf the stats gift, Kyto has tossed i Surfacs rights alone srs valued *».°*> •***• "*ads arrange limatoiy tMSjSOO. The for the university te as- retein the mineral rights O* »•••• rights. the Kyto family," the Pacos ranch er said “Ws bars always loved the high idsals for which Tsxas AAM stands, and I fad that any success that 1 have been able to achieve has been in large measure the result sf the education I re ceived there. I am, the ref are, hap- but said they would sward them -This great gift from Mr aad PT to make this contribution." Arrangements for the gift wore through Robert L. Walker. TAMU’. now director of develop Voters dealt the Trinity canal project a devastating aad per haps fatal Mow Tuesday sight, spurning a I1M million tax-bond proposal essential to the 91.1 bil lion program The issue won ctoamit ap proval in only eight of the 17 -ountiee which comprise the Trinity river basin, one short sf - for s decisive rejs^lMo with a majority of the voters, mostly from opposition in heavi ly-populated Dallas County where it tost by more than 17,000 votes The tax-bond proposal else trailed at a late hour ia Tarrant County, but the Fort Worth op position there was torn than in "I don’t think srs made ctoar enough te the voters the eco nomic advantages of the project." Baying R was premature to comment on certain aspects of tho etoctiea. Bruae added. 1 don't think this to the end of the navigational project Well have te see what develops. ... We just have to take another look at this the ioMkl share sf the 911 million program that Trinity te navigation from Fort Worth te the Gulf of Mexico. As snvialensd. vassals srould move through a network of < tho stee sf the BVRC contribution, -inspite of hard moth by the or- fset-wids ei lined with te ste is helped stage the The second superiority of Afar Fore* or Army ROTC cadets athletic ability In be games have bans by a esmMnsd total sf t) *1*0 te the university at a later date. Mrs. Kyto will ha put to 37 Educators Here Sunday FWl 0. 1 k O Rif “• u - tote the land was given ia To Study A&M benefiting Texas ranchers," TA MU President Jack K. Williams said. “We’re grateful to the Kytoe for their continuing faith la Tex as AAM and its programs." Kyto, a 19*4 Texas AAM grad- The university wlU use the toad far research in • "In terms sf what it eaa mean te our research and demonstration program la grasiag management mm! ffeyti-itioyi' tliHi IfURd Is and administrators ete, K. J. Kyto. Tsxas AAM’t invaluable,” emphasised Dr. Je- ‘ 1 stadium to named in The eight counties endorsing the project wore Navarro, Hen derssn, Kaufman, Frssatene. An derson, Lean, Trinity aad Liberty Opposing the dual tax-bond proposition wore El lie, Houston, Madison, Walker. Son Jacinto Polk and Chambers Counties. Shortly before 11 pjn.. David Bruae, general manager of the Trinity River Authority, said the oubceme remained in doubt, hut (See Trinity Project. | Claim Widespread Use Kruse, Reynolds Testify At House Drug Abuse Hearing of higher the antis* con- «r sf hto verge on Texas AAM Sunday te "*»• ••nmd 49 fsnrs so the fae- the institution in its sues- •Hy. wns the school’s first dona ktton project. «f agricuRors aad alas served as Tim t7-mambar rlsitstim team chairman of its athlotte council, will be representing the Snath- ~T*Ka» AAM has bean good to ern Aaoociattea sf CsUagea aad q_> t_ -a _ a_-x x— . vC VWOIH ITl sMrfvIrlq IVIKV sf TAMU’o fairs snd TAMU Jack K. Williams. ‘aad*^!*- Texas’ average school intendent today to a 41 yoar-oid Dr mph Schuster, head of tbs ioeti tutioa’s Range Science Depart ment “It wfll ia esssate be aa ei far defeat. "I think M’s keen a vary clone race. ... 1 knew it weald be dif ficult from the beginning.’' be AUSTIN Oft—Das ef marijuana is widespread at Texas AAM Uni- arrested last wash for smoking varsity and three-quarters ef the marijuana," he said University ef Texas tow students David Reynelds. reprueeating have used it, witnesses have told the UT law students association a House subcommittee said the MA ituisats Who voted Layne Kruse, president of the tea recent law sc heel election AAM student body, said TAMU has a conservative iaaage bat "1 marijuana. Seventy f can assure you that ia Bryan and said they had aaad it. Collage Station snd on the AAM M par cent said they wore eeca- campus that you’iu going te find atonal or regular users, a widespread use sf marijuana.’’ Kruae and Reynolds testified Kruse sold If te M Aggies are before the House ^Criminal June arrested each semester far smsk- prude act subcommittee to sap- iag ssarijuaaa ia donaitortoa. port sf a 197-page “Six students in my dorm wore by a Senate interim study corn ea drug atoue. The MU would decriminalise private pesseasisn ef three oatofM of marijuana The ck airman sf tbs Haase sab- rommittoa. Rap. Felix McDonald I) Edinburg. aaM Ml may vets as osriy as next oa some ef tho drug Milo that have been referred te it. hip McLaughlin, chief te this area sf oar state.’ Superintendents Are Special, Finds TAMU Phi). Candidate man wKh two He oa the top xtaa A x te T< compiled by Dr. James G. Horn white a Ph D candidate in edu cational administration at AAM. His rasoareh findings, published as a fear-part series to Texas has been given by the Texas farmer Snook High basketball coach, cot ad hto i Statistics aad analysis were derived from Dr. Horn from 971 qussttomiairss returned by super across Ti L farts analysis. Ns Tsxa plays a superintendent under 99 years aid. Only tl, or 9.7 par ar aider aad 47, At per coat, are te Horn’s articles ia the Novem ber, 1971, through February, 1971. issue ef the of Dr L 8 Richard -fourth ef Texas sis bogus their ca st TAMU. feaad that the a' as a social studies teacher. He tan thing te ad- at 9M yuan of ago. Many of hto extra job include sight i mtlvHtos. He to rural They either migrated te larger cRtoo or the part sf three They ass U "On During the 1971-71 I ef Horn's search. Three major Western District of Texas, who said the number ef drug oddirts in El Pneo has grown from 900 te 1997 to M00 today. McLaughlin said hi “sun exceptionally bright aad the uppers and tha duwarns, you'tw no longer afraid sf ] Dr. Robert B. White, try professor al tbs UT medical branch to Galveston, testified ia support ef the Mil, bat he said clinical data oa heavy aasrs show- ad man jus n« "dess result te un deniable effects oa n^ViTsirts apathy, confused think tog, an in ability te White said all tha evidence on drug education programs indicates they art "a total flop." Many the [ Mate -nrisirk is < rijoana, ho said, aad than te a ■••d far mousy to te T Adv. five is 1 from aad social-cuRural B-CB FROM 60.000 FEET—Thte photograph of tha Bryan-Coltege Station atm te one example of tha information relayed to TAMIT* Remote Sensing Cantor by satellite •och and high-flying aircraft. Tho photograph was taken from a U-2 reconnaissance aircraft in October 1972 “ Dr *g Abase Authority, •aid coordinate efforts of «*»• >7 state agencies that deal as aspect ef drug