Brazos County rejects charter 3 to 1 % V ts! By STEVE GRAY City Editor and JACK HODGES Battalion Staff Writer [(was apparent last night around 9, at the xas Data Center in Bryan, that the voters Brazos County, by a margin of three to , were overwhelmingly objecting to the ;ht-part revision of the Texas Constitu- n. Bidlot returns from across the state late esday indicated that voters were reject- ;theproposed revision anywhere from a three-to-one to a five-to-one margin. A little more than a third of the regis tered voters turned out in Brazos County, with College Station voters generally favor ing the amendments and Bryan residents rejecting them. It took only two hours for all the votes to be tabulated with reporters and election judges anxiously awaiting the final results. As each precinct turned in its votes, the defeat of the proposed revision in the county became more evident. County Judge William Ft. Vance, who said he was generally in favor of the new constitution, said he thought the vote would be a little closer. Vance, who spent most of the night at the data center observ ing the tabulation process, said the voter turnout was higher than he had antici pated. “I was more disappointed that the judi cial article failed than I was that the local government proposition was defeated, Vance said Tuesday night. “I think it will be interesting to see how Brazos County com pares with the rest of the state when all of the returns are in. Joe R. Barron, presiding election judge. said last night for the first time that he was opposed to the revision. “I was against the proposed new con stitution because it mixed the good with the bad, Barron said. He said that he was not surprised that the amendments were voted down, but that they might pass in some of the more “liberal cities. The voter turnout was as good as ex pected but it wasn’t as good as it should have been, he said. There were 778 ballots cast out of 1,923 registered voters in precinct 12 at Sul Ross Elementary School in Bryan, which had the largest number of voters of any precinct in that city. With 40 per cent of the registered voters voting, the separation of power and finance provisions drew the widest margins of de feat. At precinct 12, 227 people voted for, and 549 voted against the separation of powers provision. The finance provision failed with 233 for and 535 against. Precinct nine in College Station re flected the highest voter turnout, about 40 per cent, with 696 votes cast out of 1,731 registered voters. Precinct 20 voters, at the Texas A&M University Center voted in favor of all eight propositions, showing 615 ballots cast out of 2,213 registered voters. The judiciary and the voting-election provisions won by the widest margins of more than 3 to 2. All eight propositions were favored in precinct 20 by a margin of 3 to 2. There were 160 absentee votes in the county which turned down all eight propos itions. The finance and the local govern ment provisions lost by the widest margins of about 3 to 2. (See p. 3 for how C.S. precincts voted.) Cbe Battalion Vol. 69 No. 38 Copyright < 1973, The Battahon College Station, Texas Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1975 Jfexans uphold past State keeps old charter P.M. to circle Associated Press [Armies of Texans defended their ntury-old constitution Tuesday, beating ck with cannonades of votes costly and atedefforts to revise the aged document. Unquestionably, voters smashed the oposed constitutional revision with wdsides ranging from 5-1 opposition in ftal areas to 2-1 in metropolitan districts. Bit was a balloon launched in part by Lt. Bv. Bill Hobby, who conceded early in Bening vote counting that the issue was Bing down in flames. B The voters of Texas have rejected five lars of effort directed toward constitu te nal revision by as decisive a margin as lyone could imagine,’ Hobby said. “It Is a good fight but we lost." ■ With 1,111,712 of the expected 1.2 mill- 11 statewide votes counted, the measure down by a 3-1 margin. Although rural |;a voters voted against the constitution p Dposal in greater numbers, tbe opposi- ti n was evident in metropolitan and rural ;as alike from the Gulf Coast to the Irthem blackland prairies, from the de ft west to forested eastern sections of the e. hese were the latest returns today from il ? Texas Election Bureau with 244 of 254 I unties reporting, 231 complete: HProp. 1 legislative-executive — for jj8,064, against 823,648. Prop. 2 judiciary — for 314,962, against |2,464. Prop. 3 voting — for 308,348, against ,500. Prop. 4 education — for 304,705, against 3,291. Prop. 5 finance — for 279,789, against 826,737. Prop. 6 local government — for 293,059, against 811,313. Prop. 7 general — for 292,518, against 813,505. Prop. 8 amending provisions — for 306,988, against 797,489. With 102,000 votes counted, Dallas County defeated the revision measure 2-1. It was running 3-1 behind in Harris Coun ty- Jefferson County defeated all eight propositions by a 2-1 vote. Lubbock turned thumbs down at a rate of 4-1. State Sen. Peyton McKnight, D-Tyler, was one of the more vocal opponents of constitutional revision. McKnight spoke often and spoke loudly. On learning of its defeat, he said, “If there is any lesson we should have learned from this election it is that the people have a right to impose re straints upon their government and they still want to do so. The issue of a new state constitution in many ways boiled down to simple conser vative and liberal politics. Conservatives fearful of more governmental authority and more state spending tended to shy away from the idea of revising the constitution. Liberals who expect and demand more governmental activity tended to favor revi sion. But there were clear cut ironies: Fr ances “Sissy” Farenthold, one of the state’s best known liberal apostles, opposed the constitutional change. Yet, law and order defender Atty. Gen. John Hill favored it. Perhaps the most controversial aspect of the revision was the proposal to recreate state agencies every 10 years, giving the 90 80 5 ■ampus |A NEW REFRIGERATOR contract a student campus planning advisory %imittee are two of the major topics at I night s Student Senate meeting. The Meeting will begin at 7:30 p. m. in room 224 | the Harrington Center. KEN ROBINSOr?, Student legal ad- or, will speak Thursday at 7:30 in Room II in Rudder. He will speak on the rights [icl responsibilities of the tenant and rtment leases. • ROBERT S. STRAUSS, democratic itional committee chairman, will speak ursday at 8 p.m. in the Rudder Theater, ission will be 25 cents for students and I for non-students. Strauss will speak on | s partv strategies for the 1976 election. • JASON & THE ARGONAUTS, pre- nted by Cepheid Variable, will be shown luirsday at 8 p.m. in Room 701 in Rudder [JIM STAFFORD AND DAVE LOG- |NS will perform Friday at 8 p.m. in ihite Coliseum. Tickets may be obtained 1 the Rudder Box Office. • | THE ARTS & CRAFTS FAIR will be Id Friday 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and Saturday at |i.m.-12p.m. in the Rudder Center Mall. • AGGIE BLOOD DRIVE SIGN-UP is [ednesday and Thursday in the MSC, 3isa Dining Hall, and Military Quad. • THE DEDICATION of Mosher and Iton Halls will be held Saturday at 9 a.m. le Century Singers will perform. • A LIL ABNER DANCE will be held at |e Pavillion Hall at 8 p.m. Saturday. Ad- lission will be $2 per couple. THE STUDENT SENATE has posi tions open for 1 senator from the Davis- Gary-Moses-Moore area and 3 for off- campus graduate students. Anyone wish ing to apply should go by Room 216 M SC or call 845-3051. National governor and the legislature more control over some 200 state agencies. McKnight argued forcefully that each agency would be in a position of lobbying to keep his agency in existence rather than devoting energy to performing the agency’s primary tasks. The present constitution was approved in 1876 and represented the will of a people climbing from the abyss of reconstruction following the Civil War. Texans, victimized and frustrated under carpetbagger rule, took the first opportunity to create a gov ernment with as little authority over their lives as possible. Gov. Dolph Briscoe said in Dallas last week that 25 years ago — as a much younger man — he had favored revision of the constitution but came later to the con clusion that Texas had grown and pros pered under the constitution through the 1950s and 1960s. The proposals called for annual, rather than biennial, sessions of the legislature. Former Texas Supreme Court Justice Robert W. Calvert said it makes no sense to budget two years in advance for a $6 billion -a-year govern men t. But on the lips of many Texans was the old quotation: “No man s life, liberty or property are safe while the legislature is in session. Hundreds of thousands of Texans re peated it at the voting booths Tuesday. yy - *-z i- * -1 Radio plane Allan Swanson (R) hands Rodney Tanamachi a syringe full of fuel for the remote control airplane which Rodney huilt himself. The plane took 30 hours to build and can be controlled from the ground as long as it can be seen in the sky; it coasts to the ground when the fuel is consumed. Photo by Glen Johnson Fromme fires counsel, runs defense Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Lynette Fromme, denied permission to change her plea from innocent to no contest, will argue her own case against the charge that she tried to kill President Ford. Miss Fromme fired her court-appointed co-counsel Tuesday on the first day of her trial after he, the prosecutor and U. S. Dis trict Court Judge Thomas MacBride re fused to accept the plea switch. MacBride told the 27-year-old Manson devotee that she would have to question witnesses herself and make her own open ing and closing argument with a “stand-by attorney to advise her. “I think she’s foolish to try to represent herself,” MacBride told Miss Fromme’s co-counsel, John Virga. “But if she wants to do this it is certainly within her rights. Miss Fromme is accused of attempting to assassinate Ford as he walked to the state Capitol Sept. 5. Officers say they took a loaded .45-caliber pistol away from her after she pointed it at the President from about two feet away. She is the first person to be charged and tried under a 1965 federal law against at tempted murder of a president. The law was passed after the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy. If convicted, she could be sentenced to life in prison. MacBride ruled at a pretrial hearing that Miss Fromme could act as her own attor ney, but he named Virga as her co-counsel. Virga had handled most of the case since then. Shortly after jury selection began Tues day morning. Miss Fromme rose from the defense table and approached MacBride’s bench. “Your honor, these people cannot judge me, she said of the potential jurors. “They can only judge themselves. “My family judges me,’ she said, refer ring to her association with the Charles Manson clan. After a pause, she told a stunned cour troom, “I find it necessary to change my plea to nolo contendre. A no contest plea is the equivalent of accepting a conviction and its penalties without formally admitting guilt. She did not elaborate on why she wanted to make the change, but her roommate and sister Manson follower, Sandra Good, told reporters: “To go through the trial is just a farce. Society threw away the right to a fair trial when Manson and four followers were con victed of murdering actress Sharon Tate and six other persons. Miss Good said that Miss Fromme wanted to use her trial to give the Manson clan a chance to defend itself against the Tate slayings and wanted Manson to repre sent her. It was not known if Miss Fromme had asked MacBride to allow Manson to take part in the trial. MacBride and U. S. Atty. Dwayne Keyes both refused to accept the plea change. Keyes said he and the judge would have had to agree to the no contest plea before it would have been allowed. Virga said he had not been told by Miss Fromme that she planned to request a plea change, but he said he, too, opposed it. “It’s not applicable, Virga said of a no contest plea. “It’s designed for a civil case where you are trying to avoid civil liabili- ty- NEW YORK MAYOR ABRAHAM BEAME accused President Ford today of offering a cop-out, not a cure for New York City’s fiscal ills. He said Ford, in criticizing New York, ignored the city’s budget cutting record. He listed payroll deduc tions, halts in city construction and closings of municipal facilities. He promised further money-saving measures, including a change in the free university system’s financing and more hospital closings. • NELSON A. ROCKEFELLER decided to withdraw as President Ford’s possible 1976 running mate because he has become increasingly frustrated as his advice on programs is ignored and his disagreement on policy has grown. Republican sources say. Meanwhile, Senator Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., says Rockefeller’s withdrawal should lead Ronald Reagan to reassess his plans to challenge Ford. Some past and present intelligence offi cials expressed disappointment with Ford s choice of George Bush to succeed William E. Colby as head of the CIA. • THE SPANISH ARMY increased bor der patrols in the Spanish Sahara today as Moroccan officials vowed to go ahead with the march of 350,000 unarmed civilians into the country following the failure of negotiations in Madrid. Most of the troops stationed in the ter ritorial capital have been sent north toward the Moroccan border to repel the Moroc can marchers gathered in Tarfaya, 18 miles north of the border. Judge’s ruling pending on Patty’s mental state Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Patricia Hearst, described by her attorney as mentally ^’crippled and by a prosecutor as “fully competent,” awaits a judge s ruling on her mental competence to stand trial. U. S. District Court Judge Oliver J. Car ter calls it “a most difficult and most com plex question to decide,” but he promises to make the decision by Friday. In the interim, Carter said he will re examine “in great detail three voluminous reports by the psychiatric panel which examined Miss Hearst. He called the documents “complex and extremely ver bose. One report concludes that Miss Hearst was “literally a prisoner of war for 20 months” and is suffering from a “traumatic neurosis, her attorney said. But U.S. Atty. James Browning Jr. in sisted that none of the reports showed her to be incompetent to stand trial im mediately on federal charges of taking part in a bank robbery while she was a fugitive with the Symbionese Liberation Army. Miss Hearst has not yet entered a plea on the charges. Miss Hearst, in court for the first time in six weeks for her competence hearing Tuesday, was pale but alert. She wore a plain brown pants suit and her hair hung limply to her shoulders. Blank-faced at her previous court sessions, she was more ani mated Tuesday, whispering and chatting with her attorneys. Miss Hearst’s parents, Randolph and Catherine Hearst, sat in the front row of the courtroom with daughters Vicki and Ann. But Patricia, seated at the counsel table, showed no reaction to their presence. “She is making progress, visible prog ress,” attorney F. Lee Bailey said later. Bailey, in his first court appearance for the newspaper heiress, read the “prisoner of war” description from the report by Dr. L. J. West, a specialist in brainwashing after-effects. The psychiatric reports themselves re main secret but were open to court discus sion. Bailey disclosed that West recom mended three to four months of psychiatric treatment for the 21-year-old defendant. Another panel member. Dr. Seymour Pol lack of the University of Southern Califor nia, recommended 30 to 90 days of treat ment, Bailey said. Recommendations by the third panel member, Dr. Donald Lunde of Stanford University, were not disclosed. Clinical psychologist Margaret Thaler Singer also filed a lengthy report on clinical tests con ducted on Miss Hearst. Bailey urged the judge to commit Miss Hearst to a mental hospital for at least 30 days and then reevaluate her condition be fore setting a trial date. Bailey has predicted that Miss Hearst’s trial on the bank robbery charges will not begin until 1976. She faces another even tual trial in Los Angeles on state charges of kidnaping, assault and robbery. Guarneri Quartet The Guarneri Quartet performed night to a sparse audience, in the Rudder Theatre Tuesday Photo by Winnie