ir av e i) 'emteji ^tioiiili >re ninlJij 'ship ;• nestt, '’omen arecv issued tllfi and i Che Battalion Vol. 68 No. 1 College Station, Texas Tuesday, September 3, 1974 a also' oHrei is avaih ielp, ■orali-l irolFdj trsl nt itei 4&M going to Cotton Bowl says Williams at G. Rollie W And I know one other thing. At the By KATHY BRUEGGEN I The Aggie Band was blaring [ When Johnny Comes Marching ■Home” as the last few stragglers en tered G. Rollie White Monday to |attend All-University Night. What may have been the first yell ■practice for many, turned out to be Ian example of what makes Aggie- |land tick. Two freshmen “sweet young Ithangs,” Debbie Shafer of New jBraunfels and Sharon Burris pf San ■Antonio agreed that although A&M lis a big school and offers variety, it [still retains the “small school” at- [mosphere. Many maroon and white Texas [Aggie T-shirts were sprinkled [among the khaki-colored uniforms although one didn’t need glasses to see that the Corps far outnumbered the non-regs. However, a Walton Warrior banner indicated that the civilians weren’t to be overlooked. Various outfits and dorms spurted out mild obscenities as they belted out their individual yells. As if on cue. Reveille began con stant barking immediately after the prayer. From then on it was pep talk, plenty of whooping and hear ing about Aggie Spirit. Steve Eberhard, president of the Student Body, said that because of the new construction, A&M is going to be bigger and better. This com ment received mild cheers, over powered by loud hisses. He went on to say the student body would be bigger and better as well and that this would be especially true for the Fightin’ Texas Aggie football team. Dr. Williams made a smash hit when he said, “This is the year we go to the Cotton Bowl.” Williams spoke of A&M’s enrollment of 21,000 plus and said, “All those that couldn’t get in here have gone to the University of Texas. They’ve all en rolled in Home Economics there.” Williams commented on the Aggie’s forthcoming football season: “We’ve got some owls to pluck, some frogs to gig and some Red Raiders to hang by the neck. All I know is that when they come up here, we try to be nice to them and all they do is ring those damn bells. And I know one other thing. At the end of the season, we’ve got some Longhorns to butcher.” Steve Taylor, head yell leader, told a funny about how he was ac cused by a “bouncer” (dorm mother) of molesting girls at Baylor because he said “howdy” to all he met. He then spoke of Aggie Spirit and urged all students to be nice to Rice. Taylor said, “Meeting people and showing people you care is the spirit of A&M. But I don’t think we should limit it to just this campus.” Coach Emory Bellard introduced the coaching staff and players and gave a brief pep talk. He said, “We re gonna fight. We re gonna fight like gangsters and we re gonna win. I promise that. You just be there on the 14th.” The band then broke into the yells and ended with everyone proudly singing “The Spirit of Ag- gieland.” FIRST YELL PRACTICE of the year was led by head yell leader Steve Taylor in G. Rollie White Coliseum Monday night. He led a group of largely corps and freshmen at All University night. (Photo by Gary Baldasari) Mobile park owner sues CS workers; Lawyer found :h aireti ntsfora Bed til red aid mdofsj veigl aircrafl | JseTnj •oughji e byaoj iftkl ortioi dueii 11 use. 1| falls al hoi : neit!( e use veiuei |r cotfl UNIVERSITY CENTER TOURS acquainted new students with the MSC at Freshman Open House Saturday night. The open house showed students the building and the various organizations at TAMU. (Photo by Douglas Winsbip) By GERALD OLIVIER An attorney was retained by the College Station City Council Friday to represent 12 present and former employes of the city in a $50,000 suit filed by Ralph Bobbitt, owner of Bobbitt Trailer Park at FM 60 and FM 2818. Bobbitt’s park was serviced by the Bryan Rural Electrification Ad ministration (REA) until 1972, when the city of College Station an nexed the property and purchased the electrical rights. L.P. Dulaney, director of public works and one of the plaintiffs Shuttle buses, carpools, bicycles offer major means of transportation named in the suit, said electrical service was continued to the trailers already in use at the time of the transfer. Dulaney said that future hook-ups were not serviced unless they met specifications of College Station. The suit alleges conspiracy on the part of the plaintiffs to destroy Bobbitt’s business. Plaintiffs other than Dulaney named in the suit are: J.B. Hervey, former mayor; W.E. Johnson, Jr., chief electrical inspec tor; Jim Dozier, city attorney; Ran Boswell, city manager; Gail Smith, administrative assistant to the utilities department; Clarence Green, city electrician; R.M. Wil liams, assistant electrical inspector; D.B. Jones, administrator of utility department; Joe Guidry, city elec trician; and Shirley Urbanovsky, utility department employe. Larry Bravenec, city councilman, said the council voted unanimously to retain Sears and Burns of Hous ton as attorneys in the case and to pay all legal fees. The suit was discussed in closed session and the meeting was tem porarily opened to vote, although no one left the council room to make that announcement, said Bravenec. The Texas Open Meetings Law allows closed session discussion of pending litigation, but all votes must be taken in a public meeting. The suit will be heard before Federal District Court in Houston. Today Campus transportation comes in a variety of methods, the three most common being shuttle bus, private cars, and bicycles. Four different bus routes are co vered during the 7 a. m. to 6 p.m. school day service. Rounds are made every 15-20 minutes. A station wagon will serve those students remaining on campus from 6-10:40 p.m. Individuals using this service call the Physical Plant De partment at 845-4311. Passes or coupons are presented at each boarding. These are availa ble through the Fiscal Office with passes costing $15 per student per semester, $22.50 for students and spouses together and $20 for staff and faculty. A book of ten coupons is available at $1.50 for students and $2 for non-students. Route maps are available from the University Police, basement of the YMCA. Motor vehicle regulations hinge on purchase and comprehension of parking permits. Those people owning two or more motor vehicles must register each vehicle separately. Those with more than one vehicle, but using only one at a time on campus register them both under a “duplicate” permit. Those with this permit display a card on the driver’s side of the front windshield. Failure to display this results in a ticket. People who are carpooling with three or more people can register all cars under one permit and may park the vehicle driven that day in the drivers’ appropriate parking lot. Again a card is displayed on the driver’s side of the front windshield with failure to do so a ticketable of fense. Spaces marked for disabled per sons and “Reserved” are used by vehicles displaying the proper per mit. Those vehicles illegally parked in these spaces will be towed away or immobilized by wheel locks. Parking violation fines are five dollars up to five tickets. Drivers exceeding this number have their permit revoked for the remainder of the year starting Sept. 1. Delinquent tickets, those paid after a seven calendar day grace period, are an additional $5. Fines are assessed in the Fiscal Office, Coke Building. Three non-registration violations result in police impoundment of the vehicle. Permits are displayed on the seat tubes of bicycles. Those not display ing the permit are ticketed and must pay a fine and register the bike be fore it is released. Bicyclists are asked to take every precaution against theft. Today in the Batt Summer summary p. 2 Academic Council p. 6 Shuttle bus schedule p. 8 Weather Considerably cloudy and cooler with scattered showers today, tonight and tomorrow. High Tuesday 72°; low tonight 57°. Rain delays apartment construction THE BIG PUSH was needed Saturday to win the annual pushball contest. The contest took place on the drill field and dorms, both men’s and women’s, competed against each other. (Photo by David Kimmel) By ROD SPEER Construction of Phase 2 of the Scandia Apartment complex on An derson Street has been delayed by rain and, as a result, incomplete apartment units were rented, forc ing some students to fend for other housing. About 140 of the 208 units in Phase 2 have been rented, accord ing to Ja Juana Allen, manager. At least 48 of those are in the “more complete” stage with stoves, furni ture, refrigerators and air condition ing and are currently occupied, she said. Other apartments are in vari ous stages of construction and re nters live in the incomplete units or seek temporary or permanent hous ing elsewhere. Four buildings with eight units and two with 16 units are in a skeletal stage with little more than two-by-fours in place and Allen said construction on these structures has been halted to concentrate efforts on the near-complete buildings. She said construction crews are working seven days a week but could not say when the units will be finished. Gene Holmes and Paul Gibson are two undergraduates living in an incomplete apartment unit in Phase 2. They moved in Saturday, had a refrigerator installed yester day and expect & stove in a day or two. Living without air conditioning was their main concern, but they have few other complaints. They said they have not signed a lease yet and will not be charged for rent until the unit is finished. They have only invested the $50-per-person de posit. “We can’t charge rent when ten ants don’t have air conditioning, a stove or a refrigerator,” Allen said. She said no leases have been signed for Phase 2 apartments. Food price rise hits 14 per cent Food prices continued their re lentless climb during August, rising to a level 14 percent higher than a year earlier, an Associated Press marketbasket survey shows. The AP checked the prices of 15 food and nonfood items in 13 cities on March 1, 1973, a,nd has re checked at the beginning of each succeeding month. The latest check, at the start of the Labor Day weekend, showed that during August the marketbas ket went up in every city surveyed except Dallas, Tex., where it drop ped by a penny. The average in crease was 4% percent. During July, the AP marketbasket rose in all 13 cities. Many increases reflected higher prices paid to farmers and there were indications of further boosts because of the recent Midwest drought that severely damaged the corn crop that feeds the nation’s dairy cows, poultry and beef cattle. The Agriculture Department re ported Friday that the price index for raw farm products rose 3 per cent from July 15 to Aug. 15. The increase followed a 6 percent boost during the previous month. The increases come after a period during which farmers complained they were losing money on their products. Farmers still are getting less than they did a year ago when some prices were at record levels. But re tailers claim rising costs of transpor tation and other items have pre vented them from passing the sav ings on to shoppers. The latest AP survey showed that prices at the beginning of Sep tember were up in every city checked since Jan. 1, an average of 11 percent over the eight-month period. Bargains were as hard to find as ever. Preholiday sales on meat helped cut the price of chopped chuck, pork chops and all-beef frankfurters in a few cities, but over-all, there were more increases than declines in the price of meat. Eggs went up in every city checked; sugar was up again in 11 cities; coffee was more expensive in eight cities; so was butter. Rising world demand has pushed up the price of the raw sugar and boosted profits for refiners. Since last September, the price of a five- pound sack of granulated sugar has risen an average of 143 percent, ac cording to the AP survey, jumping from 74 cents to $1.80. The increase ranged from 129 percent in Boston 79 cents to $1.81, to 202 percent in Atlanta 64 cents to $1.93, over the 12-month period. Eggs went up in all 13 cities, an average 12 percent. But in every city except Albuquerque, N.M., they were 19 percent lower than they were last September. The AP survey covered Albu querque, Atlanta, Ga., Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, Providence, R.I., Salt Lake City, Utah, and Seattle.