iurvey Shows More Men than Women in Grad School Fewer women than men college jors plan to go to graduate id professional schools, accord- ig to a nationwide survey of liege students. Only 29.4 per it of the women opposed to |,6 of the men plan to pursue ■her degrees. iThe 1971 study was sponsored by the Association of American Medical Colleges, the Graduate Record Examinations Board and the Law School Admission Coun cil. The study found that the num ber of women with A grades that planned to get doctorates was almost equalled by the number of men with C grades or lower. Also, of the women who plan to get higher degrees, one out of three get them in education while only 3 per cent plan to work in law or medicine. Of the men, 12.7 per cent plan to go to law or medical school. The survey also found that among blacks 18 per cent planned to pursue a doctorate degree as opposed to 14 per cent of white seniors. This is due to the fact that “only the more able black students succeeded in earning a bachelor’s degree,” the report says. The report also stated that “there no doubt are more real istic educational opportunities available to black youths today than was the case 5 or 10 years ago.” Blacks reported financial diffi culty as the greatest obstacle to graduate school despite the sur veys statement of “increased ac cessibility and more financial assistance.” Jewish seniors lead all other denominations in planning to attend graduate school and all other Protestant or Roman Cath olic students planning to enter medical or law school. Overall, the study found that self-image and encouragement by family and friends played the greatest part in the student’s de cision to attend graduate school. The findings on women caused the principle author of the report, Dr. Leonard Baird, to say it was “society’s loss.” Students with the highest Che Battalion Weather THURSDAY—Partly cloudy & hot today with a high of 93° expected. Widely scattered showers today & tonight clear ing tomorrow and on through the weekend. Winds southeast. The low tomorrow around 73°. grades usually go to medical school or into the fields of phys ical or biological science. Students generally felt that they had a better memory, were more determined and studious than other students who planned to go to work or into the military or who had completed their studies. Everyone Complains Of His Memory, And No One Complains Of His Judgment. College Station, Texaa Wednesday, September 19, 1973 AGGIE LAND i U S A. F YOU GIVE A DAMN SIGN HERE Murder Plot Alleged AGGIE SPIRIT TAKES strange forms. Ellen Kennedy and Sandra Lloyd display this Sign-up” sheet on their Hughes Hall domicile. WASHINGTON UP) —A con victed stock swindler said Tues day he was offered $100,000 by Elliott Roosevelt and an alleged mobster frontman to assassinate the prime minister of the Ba hamas. Roosevelt, son of former Presi dent Franklin D. Roosevelt, called the allegation “an outright lie.” Louis P. Mastriana told a Senate subcommittee he was asked to assassinate Bahamian Prime Minister Lynden O. Pin- dling because of Pindling’s alleged failure to grant a gambling license to an associate of mobster Meyer Lansky. Roosevelt, in a telephone inter view with a radio station from his ranch near Lisbon, Portugal, said: “It is an utter and com plete fabrication and outright lie made by a man who is a known con-artist, who has been con victed, who has been put in jail, who has been adjudged by the courts of New Jersey as a mental imcompetent, and who conned me and my associates out of $10,000 Banquet Rooms Available Council OKs Outside Catering By VICKIE ASHWILL The 24th Memorial Student lenter Council approved Tuesday light a recommendation to allow utside caterers to use MSC ban- |uet rooms. Food Services is presently func- lioning in the University Center mt due to construction it can no onger provide catering for meals )r receptions on any large scale n the MSC. Insurance Rates Made Competitive The Council made the recom mendation with the understand ing that outside caterers will be allowed only until Food Services is again able to provide such services, providing the prices and quality remain competitive with off-campus establishments. In other action, the Council ac cepted the Travel Committee’s agenda for the year. This agenda includes five student-oriented AUSTIN ) — For the first ;ime, Texas automobile insurance lompanies can compete with each ither by cutting premium rates. The announcement was made Tuesday by Gov. Dolph Briscoe find State Insurance Board Chair man Joe Christie, a followup on ihe new competitive insurance law ?assed by the recent legislature. The officials released a list of 13 insurance firms who have been ipproved to write auto insurance ip to 15 per cent below the Sept. authorized rates. Until Tues- iay each company's rates had to >e the same on the same type of insurance, except for fire and tiomeowners coverage which be came competitive last March. "These approvals are ample svidence that Texans are going to get a better deal in the market place when they shop for auto mobile insurance,” Briscoe told a news conference. Christie said the approved fil ings announced Tuesday “will re- luce some motorists insurance >y nearly 20 per cent of last year’s rates since the board has granted a 4.3 per cent average rate reduction in August.” Christie said he would not be mrprised “if our competitive sys tem caught the attention—if not Jecome the model—of other states % are working toward insurance reform.” The companies authorized to make deviations and the amount approved by the State Insurance Board included: Select Insurance Co. 10 per lent below current rates for pri vate passenger cars except as- agned risk, 12 per cent below or eligible commercial, effective Nov. 1; Security National Insur ance Co., 15 per cent below for all eligible private passenger and commercial except assigned risk, effective Nov. 1; Massachusetts Bay Insurance Co., 15 per cent below all private passenger, hired car and non-ownership class 1 and 2, except assigned risk, effective Sept. 18; Allstate Insurance Co., 10 per cent below private passen ger except class 2 and 2 CF and assigned risk, 10 per cent below all commercial except assigned risk, commercial class 2 and pub lic, effective Oct. 3. Rules Group Seeking Membership The Senate Rules and Regula tions committee is looking for students not serving as senators to take an active voting part in its functions. The committee will meet Thurs day in Room 604A&B of the Rud der Conference Tower at 7:30 p.m. Curt Marsh, chairman, said the committee will discuss on-campus drinking and revisions to the sen ate by-laws. Two constitutional amendments and one by-law revision were ini tiated by the Rules committee last week and will be voted on at the next senate session. Clint Hackney, a committee member, is investigating on-cam pus drinking. trips beginning with the LSU- New Orleans weekend, Sept. 21- 23. The three buses booked for the LSU weekend have already been booked. The package includes a round-trip bus ticket, two nights in a hotel and a football game ticket for a student price of $48 and non-student price of $55. “Ski The Alps” is another trip planned for Jan. 3-14 to go to Averiaz, France for $395. Averiaz is 1,800 meters high in the Alps with only a cable car connection to the nearest larger village. Lo cated near Geneva, one can only get to Averiaz by foot or reindeer transportation. “Holiday On Wheels” will be Dec. 26 through Jan. 7, which is 12 days in central Europe for $380. Package includes round trip jet flight to Geneva, unlimited use of an economy car and a free car drop off in Paris if desired. The last two trips are sched uled for March 7-18 to the Spanish Riviera and Athens, Greece. The Spanish Riviera trip costs $382 for 12 days in Costa Del Sol with first and last night’s lodging in Paris. The Athens trip is $505 for round-trip air fare, daily conti nental breakfast and sightseeing tours. Three committees were also ac cepted as a part of the MSC Directorate as a result of the Tuesday meeting. These include an Outdoor Recreation Commit tee, an MSC Dance Committee and the Cepheid Variable Com mittee. The Outdoor Recreation Com mittee, chaired by Doug Ridge, is to sponsor a program of activi ties and interest groups geared to the outdors. The group will sponsor such activities as camping and canoeing. The MSC Dance Committee will serve as a programming body for the planning and production of a variety of dance programs open to A&M students. It will also function as a source of informa tion for other campus organiza tions that wish to sponsor dances for segments of the student body. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” Adv. The Cepheid Variables Com mittee is concerned only with lit erary, artistic and educational purposes in order to provide a focus for the enjoyment and study of science fiction—fantasy litera ture and art for the students, faculty and staff of the univer sity. The committee is also to encourage the development of amateur and professional science fiction-fantasy craftsmanship. The council allocated $150 to the Philosophy Department to support a lecture series by Rev. Michael Murray Oct. 16-18. Mur ray is rector of St. Michael and All Angels Church in Cuernavaca, Moreles, Mexico after having served as Communications Offi cer and Secretary for Experi mental Ministries for the Execu tive Council of the Episcopal Church. in Miami.” Roosevelt is a former mayor of Miami Beach. Pindling, reached at U.N. head quarters in New York said, “Washington seems to be full of scandals.” His aides said no formal comment would be forth coming until they had more in formation. Pindling was attend ing the General Assembly session Teague Rejects VA Post, Plans For Re-election WAXAHACHIE )-_U.S. Rep. Olin Teague said here he will seek re-election from the sixth Con gressional District next year, dis pelling speculation that he would accept appointment as head of the Veterans Administration. Teague said he still expects to meet with President Nixon about the VA post, but said, “I’m not interested in the job.” He added that a talk with the President is not likely to change his mind. Election Set To Fill Three Senate Posts An election to fill three vacant living-area Student Senate seats will be held Thursday, announced Barry Bowden, election board chairman. The Henderson-Fowler, Keath- ley-Hughes living-areas and Dunn Hall must elect senators. At the close of filing, three students from Dunn, two from Keathley- Hughes and one from Fowler were in the running. Polling places will be open from 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the respective lounges and to vote “students must present their dorm keys, ac tivity and identification cards,” Bowden said. that voted the Bahamas into the U.N. Mastriana testified that he was offered the $100,000 by Roosevelt and Michael J. McLaney, an asso ciate of Lansky. “They came to me and offered me $100,000 to kill, to whack Pindling,” Mastriana told the Senate permanent subcommittee on investigations. “They expected me to kill him.” Mastriana, now imprisoned in the federal penitentiary at Tex arkana, Tex., said McLaney was angered at Pindling because the prime minister refused to grant him a gambling license. Mastriana said he was hos pitalized for a while in the mid 1960s in New Jersey. He said that while serving time in prison on a number of charges, including forgery and fraud, “I had myself adjudicated insane so I could do anything.” He said he was released from the hospital in 1965, spent two more years in prison, and in 1968 and 1971 was “examined by gov ernment psychiatrists who found me to be of sound mind and legal ly competent.” McLaney had given Pindling nearly $1 million to finance his political campaign, Mastriana said, with the political payoff funds coming from Lansky. When the gambling license was not issued, the stocky Mastriana continued, they came to him and offered $100,000 to kill Pindling. Who are “they”? asked Sen. Charles Percy, R.-I1I. “Roosevelt and McLaney,” re plied Mastriana. McLaney was found guilty in December, 1971, of two counts of willful income tax evasion. He was sentenced in federal court to one year imprisonment and fined $8,000. Lansky is a reputed financial brain of the underworld. Mastriana said he was given $10,000 immediately. Of that sum, $7,500 came from Roosevelt, Mastriana said, and $2,500 came in the form of a check made out to Roosevelt by McLaney. Roosevelt endorsed the check over to Mastriana, a member of the committee staff said. The check, dated May 17, 1968, was made on the Bank of Nova Scotia, a bank with branches in the Caribbean. A CAVALRY HAT pro vides shade for Marty Burns’ youthful raccoon pet. (Photo by Gary Baldasari) ‘Spirit of Aggieland’ War Relic Sought to Restore as Landmark By GREG MOSES A hobbyist’s inquiry for a dif ferent color scheme has led to a search for an Aggie war relic. Mike Montgomery, an A&M student, bought a P-51 airplane model last week and wanted a different painting plan. Dave Mullins, co-owner of Hobby World, suggested he paint it like the “Spirit of Aggieland,” a World War II pursuit plane. Montgomery thought he was joking. But Mullins asked him to look up the P-51 in a book of plates illustrating the Eighth Air Force. In the illustrations of four P-51s representative of the 356th fighter group was the airplane. Under the group marking of dark blue and dark red diamonds on the cowling of the plane is a script title: “The Spirit of Aggieland.” A few days later Mullins and Montgomery began their search for the original plane. They hope to restore it and place the 38-foot plane in front of Kyle Field or the new Memorial Student Cen ter. They took their story to the Texas Aggie, The Association of Former Students and the Trigon. “No one believed us,” said Mullins, “until we showed them the book and the model. It's odd that with all the keeping up Aggies do with each other than no one we have talked to has heard of the plane.” This illustration shows no kill marks on the plane, which was based at Martleshan Heath in Suffolk, England. Mullins explained that the air plane either stayed out of combat or the pilot wasn’t very good. How does one go about finding Parking Enforcement Tightens The increase in campus parking tickets is nothing new, according to campus Chief of Police O. L. Luther. Police are now placing tickets on cars parked on the wrong lot. Previously tickets were issued only for parking in no parking zones or access lanes. A couple of weeks was allowed for new students to learn where to park. Many tickets have been issued to cars parked illegally near the over-crowded Krueger-Dunn lot. Chief Luther said that 11 more parking spaces have been added to that lot from the Corps park ing zone. “Students who cannot find a place to park there should park in lot 50 across from the Zachry Engineering Center,” he said. Chief Luther added that about 500 more parking spaces would be open Oct. 15 when the lot east of the railroad tracks opens. Parallel parking will also soon be allowed on Lewis, Houston and Throckmorton Streets. Until then, Luther explained, tickets may be avoided by park ing on the lot 50 where there are generally 300 to 400 spaces available. a plane that is 30 years old? The plate gives the Air Force identi fication markings, OCV; and the first three series numbers. From this and other information in the book Mullins and Montgomery have placed the airplane down to the squadron level. They have written letters to the group and squadron commanders working with addresses dated in the 1940s. The crucial information the two need to find the plane is the last three serial numbers. With those numbers, one letter to the Wright Patterson Air Force Mu seum in Dayton, Ohio and they can tell us where the plane is,” said Mullins. “One of four things has hap pened to the plane,” said Mullins. “It was either lost near the end of the war, sold to a foreign coun try as surplus, scrapped for alum inum, or, hopefully, stored at Kingsman, Arizona. If it is stored at Kingsman the two hope to retrieve it and add a landmark of sentimental and historical value to many at A&M. j