*lNational truck-strike violence hits Rio Grande Valley By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I One truck driver was shot and le coibiJ another fired on late Wednesday on the 5-13 otj rence, as violence from the widespread trucker strike suddenly hit in Texas’ Lower Rio Grande Valley. I The two shootings occurred about five miles apart on U. S. 81, one at the northern edge of harr, Tex., and the other a quar- r mile south of Edinburg. The first driver, witnesses said, tumbled into a Pharr service sta- Department of Public Safety put out a bulletin for a red-and-white tractor pulling an aluminum trail er. Police said a gun of .38 caliber or larger was used in both shoot ings. Meanwhile, independent truck ers in East Texas moved to get West Texas truck stops—some of which reopened Tuesday—to again shut down. “Some of our men left for West Texas last night to talk to the truckers and the truck stops out there,” said Wesley Brooks, a spokesman for East Texas truck ers who pulled their rigs off the roads and parked at truck stops in the area last Friday. “The strike is going to flare up again in West Texas,” he add ed. Truck stops in West Texas re opened when truck drivers re moved their rigs from several truck stops in the Abilene and Big Spring area. They explained that some of the truck stops had re fused to go along with the shut down and “it was unfair to keep some closed while others did bus iness.” Most truckers reacted unfav orably Wednesday to the an nouncement by President Nixon that he was ordering a freeze in the price of diesel fuel. Leroy Sells, a truck operator in San Angelo, said: “If Nixon would get the freight rates up to make up for the difference in price and then freeze diesel pri ces, he might help something.” Higher freight rates, faster highway speeds and lower diesel prices are the three demands of truckers. That’s the reason they pulled their rigs off the road, pledging to keep them off until they received some satisfaction from the government. Meanwhile, the effects of the stoppage continued to spread with poultry farms and meat packing firms feeling the pinch. Spokesmen for the industry said that scarcities of fresh pro duce and meats will become ap parent at supermarkets and gro cery stores in a few days unless a quick solution is found to the trucking strike. Holly Farms closed its poultry processing plant Wednesday in tion and told of being shot. The Center because of the truckers strike, president Everett Solomon said. Holly Farms employs about 700 persons in the plant and has another 100 field employes. Solomon said chickens were available but shipping of process ed broilers to distant points such as Chicago has shut down by the truckers strike. The plant here is one of the largest in the state. second driver reported being shot it a few minutes later. Pharr police chief Raul Reyna identified the wounded driver as Robert Kobrick who was taken to IcAllen General Hospital with a leg wound. Both drivers told local and state dice they were shot at by a man |in a tractor-trailer rig. The Texas Che Weather Thursday mostly cloudy and cool. Today’s hi 49°. Partly cloudy and slightly warmer Fri- Senate rejects day. Hi 57 c fo word yet from Hearst 1 kidnappers Rattalion athletic °P tion TOWfej-lK Upl j|||| ^||§||||fr iPjj |i||l By LATONYA PERRIN the printed copies of the plan. A one-vote margin defeated a recommended The $19 plan proposed by the Student Ser\ the printed copies of the plan. The $19 plan proposed by the Student Services j as het iton fC finiskj Jeckert) 1 all y is ring ion, ruc- the esh- Pro- at a it, a rine for and the e of titer i. to y be Vol. 67 No. 344 CoDefC Station, Texas Thursday, February 7, 1974 BERKELEY, Calif. ) — The [FBI circulated photographs Wed- Jnesday of “possible suspects” in Ithe kidnapping of newspaper heir ess Patricia Hearst, while her par- [ents pleaded again for word from [the kidnappers. An FBI spokesman said the photographs included both men and women but would not elab orate. The San Francisco Examiner, a Hearst newspaper, reported that ; photos, including women associat ed with militant organizations, jjwere being shown by FBI agents | on the University of California [campus here and elsewhere. The FBI, which reported ear- f lier there had been unspecified | new developments in the case, : confirmed the photographs had been circulated, but it declined I comment on the specifics carried in the newspaper report. The girl’s father, Randolph A. [Hearst, his wife Catherine at his [side, told a news conference his | family was sitting by the tele phone and “just hoping whoever j has our daughter will call us.” Miss Hearst, 19, a sandy-haired f college sophomore, was kidnaped Monday night from her apartment and tossed screaming into the trunk of a car. Her captors beat her fiance and a neighbor and sprayed gunfire at witneses. There has been no word from the kidnappers. “We sit by the i phone and wait,” said Hearst. [ "They have not killed yet. And they haven’t yet seriously injured j anyone. I just hope they don’t go any further.” Thomas Druken, assistant spe- Enrollment up in spring student service fee of $17.50 with an athletic user fee of $1 for home football games Wednes day night at the Student Senate meeting. The vote was 41 to 40 with one abstention. The vote was taken after extensive debate on See page three for a tally of the roll-call vote. Spring enrollment is a record 17,756, Registrar Robert A. Lacey announced Wednesday. Lacey said registration is up 16.8 per cent over the same per iod last year. The spring enrollment includes 3,980 women and approximately 3,700 graduate students. Lacey explained the figures represent enrollment as of Tues day, the 12th class day of the semester and official reporting period for the Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System. whether or not to substitute the $17.50 option for a plan asking for a $19 fee with no user fee for athletics. “Students who go to games get more good from football than the students who do not, there fore, it seems only reasonable that they should pay more for that extra good,” said John Nash, (Law-Puryear). An alternate plan proposed by Senator Ron Miori (Business) was overwhelmingly defeated by a voice vote after a short debate. The plan would have lowered Student Services Fees by 50 cents and would primarily have cut funds to the Memorial Student Center and the Student Government. After the defeat of the Friesenhahn-Gohmert- McNeely-Miori Plan, Miori was bombarded by the other senators with the wadded remnants of Fees Committee passed the Senate by a large majority. An amendment proposed by Sen. Randy Stephens asking that $15,000 be set aside from athletic funds for women’s athletics under intra murals failed to pass with the plan. Debate on the executive branch constitutional revisions centered around the article concerning the presidential veto. Two amendments to do away with the veto power of the president and to leave the over-riding power of the sehate at a necessary two-thirds vote were defeated. The other revisions passed by the Senate will appear on the referendum ballot this spring. The Senate also approved a new graduate senator representing the off-campus living area. Henry Smahlik was nominated by Randy Ross to fill that vacated position. Treasurer David White proposed a resolution to put the lawn policy of the Memorial Student Center on the referendum ballot. Vice President Shariq Yosufzai relinquished the meeting to Speaker Pro Tern Jan Faber during the debate on this issue. Yosufzai then spoke for the Senate to take a firm stand on the issue rather than sending it to the students. (See SENATE REJECTS, page 3) Annual think-tank returns 4 THE MANY FACES of science fiction are explained to Creed Ford by David Hayes as William Kostura looks on at the Cepheid Variable Science-Fiction Committee booth at the Memorial Student Center Open House Wednesday night. The open house offered a compressed view of the far-ranging activities of the MSC organizations to the few who bothered to turn out. Photo by Alan Killingsworth Trying to take the major ideas of our nation’s existence and analyzing them in order of importance is a mind-stimulating (or mind-boggling) task. SCONA dele gates have got quite a job on their hands. The topic of “Re-ordering American Priorities” will provide for interaction next week between a variety of important speakers and about 200 student delegates to the 19th Student Conference on National Affairs. Ideas on energy, environment, social spending, national defense, and foreign policy will be presented and discussed at the Feb. 13-16 conference. An analysis of U.S. priorities compiled by the Library of Congress will be used by the delegates as a “textbook.” Chairman Steve Kosub said the topic, “Reordering American Priorities,” may be too broad, “but it presents a wealth of areas for delegates to explore.” “What these areas will be depends on delegate interest,” he added. “Their tax money will be spent in the future in sup port of what will be discussed at SCONA XIX.” Most idea exchange among student dele gates will take place at roundtables. At roundtables, delegates will discuss and elaborate ideas presented by speakers, from SCONA materials and of their own. “The roundtable is actually where it happens,” explained Kosub. “Here, speak ers’ main points are reviewed, kicked around, analyzed and from this, other ideas and better understanding derived.” “American priorities will not be ordered, or reordered, to reflect the needs and wants of the nation without the stimulus of an informed, broadly reaching national de bate,” Kosub said. Speakers who will help focus delegate thinking are Mrs. Alice Rivlin, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washing ton; William D. Ruckelshaus, former EPA director most people remember as the one time U.S. Deputy Attorney General; Dr. Hans Morgenthau, political science profes sor, City University of New York; The Honorable William P. Clements Jr., deputy secretary of defense; Dr. Abba Lerner, Queens College economics professor, and Ms. Barbara Williams, executive director, Coalition for Human Needs and Budget Priorities. cial agent in charge of the FBI’s San Francisco office, re ported the new developments, but he refused to disclose any details and said no ransom note had been received. Kunstler arrangements The girl’s parents maintained a -vigil at their estate in subur ban Hillsborough about 15 miles south of San Francisco. Her fa ther is president and publisher of the San Francisco Examiner. Her mother is a member of the University of California board of regents. In a statement issued earlier, they pleaded for their daughter’s safe return and promised that they would not prosecute her kid nappers. made by TAMU ACLU Tuesday The Battalion printed that William Kunstler would appear at Texas A&M Univer sity due to the efforts of the Brazos Valley chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. This is not entirely correct. The arrange ments were made by the TAMU chapter of the ACLU. The Brazos Valley chapter is merely providing financial assistance. Kunstler is tentatively scheduled to speak March 3 in the University Center Auditorium, according to Marty Hokanson, president TAMU ACLU. Today in the Batt Tenants and rates p. 2 The Seven Ups p. 5 The William Kunstler issue has caught the attention of much of TAMU. Many students see the conflict as a basic one of academic freedom. Tim Clader, Town Hall chairperson, saw it as an opportunity for a joke. He put a sign reading “Brazos Valley ACLU Headquarters — Donations for Kunstler speech accepted inside” on his door. Clader lives two doors down the hall from SCONA Chairperson Steve Kosub in the Band dorm. “The sign was a joke,” said Clader, “but I would like to see Kunstler speak here and I will support whatever group wishes to sponsor him. “The sign gets ripped off daily,” he added. The final joke may be on Clader, however. He has already collected over $20 for the Kunstler speech. Clader plans to give the ACLU a check for the donations sometime before Kunstler’s sched uled appearance. Nixon blocks Ervin committee Claims ‘national interest’ at stake WASHINGTON 0T>—President Nixon wrote a federal judge Wednesday that dis closing conversations that are contained on five White House tape recordings requested by the Senate Watergate committee “would not be in the national interest.” In a letter to U.S. District Judge Ger hard A. Gesell, the President reasserted his position that the Senate committee should not get the five recordings. All of them contain conversations he had with ousted White House counsel John W. Dean III. “The Senate Select Committee has made known its intention to make these materials public,” the President said in a letter that he signed personally. “Unlike the secret use of four out of five of these conversations before the grand jury the publication of all these tapes to the world at large would seriously infringe upon the principle of confidentiality, which is vital to the performance of my constitu tional responsibilities as president.” The judge said that the President’s claim of executive privilege was too gen eralized and vague and that it was not up- to-date. Since the committee subpoenaed the tapes another district judge ordered other tapes—including four of those re quested by the committee—to be turned over to special prosecutor Leon Jaworski. The President also raised the possibility of adverse effects on criminal proceedings “should the contents of these subpoenaed conversations be made public at an inappro priate time.” The next step in the case is up to Gesell, who must decide whether to give court backing to the committee’s subpoena. In other Watergate-related developments Wednesday: • Sen. Lowell P. Weicker Jr., R.-Conn., asked President Nixon in a series of ques tions how his responsibility differs from that of John W. Dean III, who has pleaded guilty to obstructing justice. Weicker asked why Nixon did not turn over to a judge or prosecutor, as required by law, the evidence of Watergate crimes Dean says he gave him last March 21. The White House had no immediate comment. • A three-judge panel in Alexandria, Va., disbarred Dean from law practice in Virginia for what it called unethical, un professional and unwarranted conduct in the Watergate case. • Special Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski asked a federal judge to consider limiting the Sehate Watergate Committee’s use of presidential tapes it receives from the White House. • The House, by a vote of 410 to 4, armed its Judiciary Committee Wednesday with broad subpoena power to help deter mine whether President Nixon should be impeached. Taking solemn note that only once be fore in the nation’s history has such a reso lution been acted on, the House adopted it as a necessary step to meet its constitutional duty in impeachment cases. “Whatever we learn,” said Rep. Peter W. Rodino, D.-N.J., chairman of the Judici ary Committee, “whatever we conclude, the manner in which we proceed is of historic importance—to the country, to the presi dency, to the House, to our constitutional system and to future generations.” Classic play ‘Brigadoon’ here Monday THE UPWARD-THRUSTING, sparkling waters of the University Center fountain were turned on Wednesday night for the first time in weeks as the Memorial Student Center held its Spring Open House. The magic of “Brigadoon,” with “a kind of sweetness like the smell of heather in the rain,” will be recreated Monday at the Bry an Civic Auditorium. The Lerner and Loewe musical plays in the Rotary Community- Series, in cooperation with Town Hall. Don Grilley and Lesley Stewart star in the popular Broadway show with the entrancing music “Almost Like Being in Love,” “Come to Me, Bend to Me” and “Heather on the Hill.” Brigadoon, a Scotland village that reappears only once each 100 years, comes to life again at 8. Two American tourists stumble on the village on a day when a wedding is being celebrated. They are caught up in the beauty, joy and tragedy of the people. One of the Americans falls in love with a Brigadoon lass. As the day draws to a close, he is confronted with the choice of los ing her or giving up the modem world. Many critics acclaim the show as one of the best blends of danc ing and music with text. Chore ography, originally by Agnes de- Mille, captures the Scottish feel through Highland flings, sword dances and reels. It also enriches dramatic moments with moving ballets. “Brigadoon” is one of the most frequently-produced plays to come out of Broadway. It is a new York Critics Circle Award winner and considered a classic with “Show Boat,” “Carousel,” “South Pacific” and “Oklahoma.” Admission is by Rotary season ticket. Tickets are also on sale at the Rudder Center box office. Photo by Alan Killingsworth University National Bank "On the side of Texas A&M.” Adv.