ed Che Battalion No One Has Ever Been Heard Of, Who Could Outsmart Honesty. Vol. 67 No. 232 !d lnf °flL ' 379 ’ \ti an ■ 1 College Station, Texas Wednesday, March 21, 1972 WEDNESDAY—Clear to part ly cloudy. Increasing cloudi ness tonight. High 77, low 51. THURSDAY — Mostly cloudy with widely scattered showers and a few thundershowers. High of 73. 845-2226 ,?e to •3li),s l ithe hJ ) averae.' the i r with 27 nings, 0 Housttij % for j .i 1(1 the rL e would »jjjJ ^ to annoE and PitctiiJ l - 3 for th( 8 play, er yfeil iwo ttiingt jld do ave a tml I year. Leart I mger eedinj A lumpy | he breast !. is not hei. il or bladile ieness or lordiffb!)! hange in le. ts longei e , it delay;. I SOCII 1 THE EUItlSsn I Kruse, Chairmen Propose Plan To Cut Senate Seats By Half By VICKIE ASHWILL Staff Writer How effective can a Student Senate be when over one-fourth of the incumbent senators have been appointed by the Student Government president during the year? The fact that Student Govern ment President Layne Kruse has appointed 19 out of the 83 Senate seats with eight more in jeopardy is just one reason for leaning toward the acceptance of the pro posed constitutional amendment to reduce the size of the Senate. “We want to decrease the size of the Senate to make it more workable and better informed,” said Fred Campbell, Rules and Regulations Committee chairman. “Presently it is too large to be an effective body.” "The communication between the Senate and executive commit tee was really weak this year,” said Bill Hartsfield, Academic Affairs Committee chairman. The amendment, if passed with a two-thirds Senate and student body approval, would basically cut the size of the Senate in half and would become effective with the spring election 1974. “Some people argue that we should wait another year before we bother with the size of the Senate,” said Hartsfield. “But if it is decided with the spring elec tions this year it won’t affect anyone for another year. “We want the students to de cide on this amendment as well asaJJ other constitutional amend ments during the spring elec tions,” continued Hartsfield. “It is at this time we have the great est student input on Student Gov ernment matters.” “This Student Senate would be much more objective and less politically conscious about the best size for the Senate,” said Kruse. “Next year elections will be coming up that will affect those making the decision.” All three pointed out that sev eral positions within the Senate either have no one running or no one running against them. “People tend to consider an office more important with more competition,” said Campbell. “With the added competition, a student would actually have to get out and campaign for his position,” continued Hartsfield. “They are really going to have to care about what they are doing.” The increased competitiveness would possibly increase the qual ity of the Senate, said Kruse. “This amendment preserves the concept of having both a living area and college representation,” said Hartsfield. “We are not try ing to judge which is a better system of representation at this time.” “In the long run, it will be easier to hold representatives accountable for decisions they make,” said Campbell. “The amendment would allow increased participation of indi vidual student senators, allowing each senator to become more in volved with the Senate and reso lutions would have more of a proper hearing,” commented Boney To Speak Tonight For BAC Dr. J. Don Boney, Houston schools instructional officer, will lecture at 8:00 tonight in the Black Experience III program under way this week. The HISD official will discuss education and its relevancy to the black experience. A public-free event, the talk will start in the Memorial Stu dent Center Assembly Room, an nounced Black Awareness Com mittee chairman Wayne De- Vaughn. Dr. J. Don Boney The MSC is also the scene of other Black Experience III ac tivities this week, including a Thursday performance by the Bryan High School Stage Band and an exhibit of African arti facts and materials from the In stitute of Texan Cultures. Dr. Boney recently called se curity a top school priority. The Houston Independent School Dis trict chief instructional officer said, “If you don’t cool down the schools and get some order, noth ing is going to happen education ally.” He is a certified psychologist and formerly was associate dean of the College of Education at the University of Houston. Black Experience III has lined up Wednesday for “Soul Food Day” in the TAMU dining halls. On Friday, the Chocolate Glass Band of Houston will provide rhythm and rock music for a 9 p.m. to midnight dance at the KC Hall on Leonard Road in Bry an. Tickets at $2.50 per person are available at the Student Pro gram Office in the MSC or from BAC members. A 3 p.m. Sunday worship serv ice at the All Faiths Chapel will conclude Black Experience III. Kruse. The proposed revision states that 25 senators will represent the college areas on the basis of the percentage of the number of students enrolled within each college. Each college will still have equal class representation from the sophomore to the gradu ate level if possible with re mainders being elected at-large. The living area representation ratio will be doubled from one senator to every 500 to one for every 1,000 on campus, except for the Corps of Cadets. Corps repre sentatives are apportioned in the same manner with class repre sentation. The off-campus representation will also be increased to one for every 1,000. Freshman senators are to be elected at-large by the freshman class with the ratio the same as it is now, one to every 500. “The freshman senator ratio will remain the same as we feel the freshmen do not have the opportunity to vote on their representation except at this time,” said Campbell. A TWO-WHEELER AUCTION was held Tuesday by the A&M Wheelmen in the Grove as which netted over $300 for bikes most people would think a person couldn’t give away. Money from the sale is going to the campus chest. Club secretary Karl Jackson was auctioneers for the event. Emphasis On Speed, Accviracy ‘Magic’ Check-Out System Coming In Exchange Store Rudder Lecture Series Set With Dr. Seaborg Speaking Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg, former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, will discuss “A Nu clear Decade 1961-71” at the sec ond annual Rudder Lecture Se ries beginning Monday at Texas A&M. The three-part presentation will beheld at 8 p.m. Monday through Wednesday in the Zachry Engi neering Center auditorium. Dr. Haskell Monroe, vice presi dent for academic affairs and Rudder Lecture Series Commit tee chairman, said Dr. Seaborg emphasized his talks will be non- Sweetheart Forms Ready For Juniors Applications will be available starting tonight for Sweetheart of the Junior Class, announced Class Secretary Penny Ball. Forms will be passed out at the class meeting being held at 7:30 p.m. in Room 303 of the Physics Bldg. Tickets for the class ball being held in the Sbisa Dining Hall annex at 9 p.m. Saturday (March 31) are available at the MSC Student Programs Office for $7.50. The price also includes tickets to the class barbecue to be held at 12:30 p.m. the same day at Hensel Park. Sweetheart applications are due at 5 p.m. next Wednesday in the Programs Office and up to six finalists will be picked. The win ner will be picked at the semi- formal dance. Music will be pro vided by “Excitement, Inc.” of Louisiana. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” Adv. technical. “We anticipate Dr. Seaborg’s talks will center on the problems of relating the world of science to the realities of government and politics,” Dr. Monroe noted. Supported by the Association of Former Students, the lectures honor the memory of James Earl Rudder, TAMU president for more than a decade prior to his death in March, 1970. The admission-free lectures are intended to bring to the campus each year a scholar of renowned insight and experienced talent, Dr. Monroe pointed out. Dr. Seaborg, co-recipient of the 1951 Nobel Prize for chemistry, is currently University Professor of Chemistry and associate director of the Lawrence Berkeley Labo ratory at the University of Cali- fornia-Berkeley. He was chancel lor of that institution for three years prior to accepting the AEG chairmanship in 1961. He returned to Berkeley in 1971. Seaborg served as president last year of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and is now chairman of the AAAS board of directors. Since 1966, he has been president of Science Service, an organization devoted to the popularization of science. Since its inception in 1959, he has chaired the steering committee for the Chemical Education Mate rial Study, a program that has revolutionized high school curric ula. Dr. Seaborg has served five Presidents. He was AEC chairman under Presidents Kennedy, John son and Nixon and served under President Truman as a member of the AEC’s first General Ad visory Committee and under President Eisenhower on the Sci ence Advisory Committee. As AEC chairman, Dr. Seaborg visited over 60 foreign countries. In 1963 he headed the U. S. dele gation to the USSR for the sign ing of the “Memorandum on Co operation in the Field of Utiliza tion of Atomic Energy for Peace ful Purposes” and was in the del egation to Moscow for the sign ing of the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. In September 1971, he was president of the Fourth Unit ed Nations Conference at Geneva on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy. He was the principal speaker at the dedication of TAMU’s Cy clotron Institute in December, 1967. During World War II, Dr. Sea borg headed the group at the Uni versity of Chicago’s Metallurgical Laboratory which devised the chemical extraction processes used in the production of plutonium for the Manhattan Project. Computerized book numbers, ers. The NCR 280’s will be used automatic calculators and “mag* in conjunction with color-coded ic” wands will be featured in the tags which will be prepared and placed on each textbook. The tags will contain the book’s price, the course in which it will be used, the book section department and the book’s Inter national Standard Book Number (ISBN). Upon checking out, the cus tomer will place his books on a counter and the wand reader will pass over each tag. The tag in formation will be shown on the terminal and the terminal will automatically compute sales tax, show total of the purchase, and compute change due the cus tomer. All data contained on the tag plus the transaction codes keyed on the terminal will be recorded and saved on a magnetic tape for inventory purposes. The ISBN, which is the focal point of the tagging system for the new Exchange Store, is a standardized book numbering system used throughout the United States. The number con tains a group identifier, a pub lisher identifier, a title identifier, and a check digit. The information captured through the NCR 280 system will be used to update the Exchange Store’s master book file and to generate sales reports. The mas ter book file will be accessed to produce inventory reports, pur chase reports and sales reports. With the new system, the Ex change Store management will be able to find the quantity of books in stock for a given course without physically counting each book on the shelf. The new system, according to Exchange Store manager Chuck Cargill, will be used only in the book section of the Exchange Store when it is relocated in the new Memorial Student Center complex. The new equipment is part of a system of book pricing and inventory that will speed check out time and prevent incorrect pricing. The heart of the new check-out equipment will be 10 National Cash Register NCR 280 Retail Terminals with wand tag read- More Names Listed For A&M Elections Two names have been added to the list of those running for of fices in the March 29 Spring Elections. Alan Higgins is a candidate for the Rules and Regulations Committee chairmanship and James Wilson Jr. is running for the graduate spot in the Senate for the College of English. The Battalion inadvertently left out the names of the stu dents running for at-large post representing the College of Geo sciences. Gary Couples, Edward Kitchen and Jeff Stone are com peting for the office. Also Kent Bettizworth is vy ing for the Corps of Cadets jun ior senator post and David Cham- plin is running for the College of Architecture’s senator. Candidates should contact Steve Vincent at 845-4682 if their names weren’t printed in Tuesday’s paper. book section initially. The book section will be separated from the remainder of the Exchange Store facilities. Azaleene Covey, manager of the Memorial Student Center Gift Shop since 1962, has been named manager of the Exchange Store. Mrs. Covey succeeds Charles R. C“huck” Cargill, who has been named manager of the new university center. She will be responsible for the operation of the university book- store, including the soon-to-be- opened facility in the University Center and all of the bookstore branches. Ag Band Performs F riday The Texas Aggie Concert Band will perform the first time in public Friday in a free presenta tion sponsored by the Bryan Pub lic Library. The new organization com posed of 75 members of the Tex as Aggie Band was formed this spring. The “Star Spangled” concert, at 8 p.m. in the Bryan Civic Auditorium, will feature patriotic anthems, military marches, pop ular music and symphonic pieces. The evening of music comprises this year’s “Family Night” event, an annual public-free presenta tion of the library. Maj. Joe T. Haney, associate director of the Aggie Band, will direct the special group in an 11-number program including “M arch Militarie Francaise,” “Cole Porter-A Symphonic Por trait for Concert Band,” “Great Themes from Great Italian Mov ies,” “Introduction and Fantasia” and “Fiddler on the Roof.” On the popular side will be “Sounds of the Carpenters,” a symphonic arrangement of the Carpenters’ top-selling hits. Some of the featured soloists will be Paul Herrington and Tim Clader, flute; Marty Glass, clari net; Steve Moore, Daniel Vrla and Mark Wright, percussion; Mark Herrington, oboe; Steve Kosub, trumpet; Cliff Simmang, French horn; Robert Townsend, baritone, and Dennis Kelly, alto saxophone. Moore and Townsend are All- State Band musicians. The Ag gie Concert Band, an extra-cur ricular activity for bandmen, also includes a number of all-region and all-district performers. “This is something the men want to do and enjoy doing,” commented Haney, who also di rects a 17-piece stage band. They also are members of the Texas Aggie Band, directed by Lt. Col. E. V. Adams. The stage band will play a free concert at the Grove later this spring and at the April 20 All- Sports Banquet for the TAMU Athletic Department. Both or ganizations welcome inquiries about appearances. Kruse Recognized By TISA As Top Student President Student Government President Layne Kruse was recognized as an outstanding contributor by a student body president to the Texas Intercollegiate Scholastic Association last weekend. Four other student body presi dents were recognized at TISA’s three-day convention at the Uni versity of Houston. According to External Affairs Committee Chairman Barb Sears, the main purpose of the conven tion was to elect officers for the following year although there were also some workshops and speakers. Sears was elected to the board of directors for this region which also gives her a director’s seat in the Texas Student Lobby. She is also on the National Student Lobby’s board of directors. Keynote speakers included Sec retary of State Mark White and Ron Waters from the Texas Leg islature. White spoke mainly about a proposal under consideration which would change the primary election dates from April with run-offs in May to August with run-offs in early September. “This type of action would lower campaign costs for per sons running for office,” said Sears, “and basically make things easier on the politician.” Waters, 22-year-old Houston representative, spoke to the dele gates representing schools on marijuana reform. Darwin McKee, present Stu dent Government president at Austin College, was elected by the delegates for 1973-74 TISA president. McKee will be a law student at the University of Texas next year. (See Kruse, page 7) ‘Night Gallery’ Host To Speak Here Rod Serling Tickets went on sale today for Rod Serling’s April 10 talk at A&M. A playwright and author whose works have treated the man-eat- man nature of society, Serling will speak in a Great Issues pres entation coinciding with Civilian Student Week. Serling’s topic will be “Impact of Mass Media on Today’s Socie ty.” The host of NBC-TV’s imagi native “Night Gallery” and the long-running TV series “The Twi light Zone” will speak at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday, April 10, in G. Rollie White Coliseum, according to Great Issues chairman T. C. Cone. The Residence Halls Associa tion is assisting Great Issues for the program. Serling’s appearance here will fulfill a special interest of the prolific TV writer. His company commander in World War II was an Aggie and “I’ve always want ed to see Aggieland,” Serling said. TV’s most outspoken authority on “the devious ways of televi sion censorship” according to Time Magazine, Serling con stantly bickers and contends with networks, ad agencies and spon sors on what he could say and scraps with directors over how to say it. Yet Serling served TV, Time credited, “with some of the most tightly constructed, trenchant lines it has ever spoken.” One example is “Requiem for A Heavyweight,” winner of six Emmy Awards including one for Serling himself. It was the first original 90-minute drama written expressly for television. Other TV credits include the current Night Gallery series and the Hallmark Hall of Fame’s “A Storm in Summer” screenplay and, for Universal Pictures’ TV “World Premiere,” “The Dooms day Flight.” The MGM screenplay “Saddle The Wind,” Warner Brothers- Seven Arts’ “Seven Days in May” and 20th Century Fox’s “Planet of the Apes” also carried Serling credits. The latter was co-authored with Michael Wilson. The 48-year-old New York na tive has also published three an thologies of short stories from The Twilight Zone, two from Night Gallery and other books. Serling still writes the current “Gallery” series, a feature film a year and, in between two books and the book for a musical, takes to the lecture circuit for a dozen speeches a year across the U. S. Serling enlisted in the U. S. Army Paratroopers the day he graduated from Binghamton, N. Y., high school. During three years in the Pacific with a demo lition-assault platoon of the 511th Parachute Infantry, he was run- nerup for the division feather weight boxing championship. This exposure to prize-fighting led to “Requiem for A Heavy weight.” The first writer to serve as national president of the Acade my of Television Arts and Sci ences, Serling has won numerous other awards, including the first Peabody Award given a writer. (See ‘Night Gallery,’ page 2) Banking is a pleasure at First Bank & Trust. Adv.