a «ipton(| ten Do» Sumnif! r AU "ooperC Ladder, Top of the News Campus lures FIFTY-ONE PRAIRIE VIEW ! d Live V&M University students — hailing Hm Texas, Alabama, Louisiana, I'ees Georgia, Nigeria and the Bahamas hvood SI;—have been picked for inclusion in || 1976-77 edition of “Who’s Who Hong Students in American Uni- /ei sities and Colleges.” ^JjUDENT COUNCIL officers of is A&M’s College of Business AY ||l sponsor a career seminar be- 7, 12n«Hning at 1 p.m. Monday in Rud- lei Theater. The seminar will be at- Y Hded by area industrial represen- merStn^atives and will end 10 p.m. Tues- y^.'k.D MASTERS PAINTINGS e r 2p from the Blaffer Collection at the 0 p men i|Jiii v e r sity of Houston will be on : 30p m Bblic display in the Rudder Ex- ; e Fgfljlht Hall today -ityHalH TWO MORE CASES of dog rabies were confirmed yesterday, 1Y H s > n 8 the total to 37 cases in the RegisiiHrrent epidemic, the Laredo- ,9 am,Hebb County Health Department Hjorted. A spokesman said the two iomics(§§Kes were confirmed from among p.m. H dog heads sent to Austin for Halysis. Both of the rabid dogs ] were shot by police under supervi- ('i'! sion of a health department sanita ria, Texas r vs. Mom 34-45. E s. Moses w |7TEXAS’ MULTI MILLION dol- Hr citrus crop has escaped major K]atuleix!s W( , a th er damage, however citrus aulf wers ex P ect r i s i n g prices be en vs yB use f reeze damage to Florida s. VetI§(°ps, Agricidture Commisioner L 48 ; BSC jlhn C. White said yester- s P' dly.White said prices already are ^ in teasing on cabbage which is sell ing for as much as $10 a bag-almost ,,. Si a head. Vet IH® ss'litl the UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS ators vs.fHnked in the top 10 in a survey ’layerssi among public institutions for its k li-aduate training in law, education 42-21 aii 1 business, university officials / skid yesterday. UT’s law school ■ and Eas)■pnkcd fifth nationally among public ilistitutions and its graduate pro- vs CBjrgr.ims in education and business lec. & fHtnked ninth. The study, conducted b\ the University of California at ’Berkley, said no other institution- *** public or private in the Southwest achieved ratings in any of the categories. National I ANDREW DALTON LEE pwaits a court hearing to determine jryvhether he will be sent back to Kalifornia to face charges of conspir ing to pass U.S. defense secrets to the Soviet Union. Assistant U.S. At torney Rene Gonzalez said the hear ing would be held today if Lee’s at torney, Kenneth Kabn, arrived from Los Angeles. 1 AN ATTORNEY for French-born singer Claudine Longet has asked for an extension of the time allowed for appealing her negligent Homicide conviction in the shooting Heath of her lover, pro skier Vla- Himir “Spider” Sabich. Longet, Hx-wife of singer Andy Williams, Has expected to return to her job of [ tutoring grade-school children in French. I FOUR PERSONS aboard a Coast ! Guard helicopter surveying naviga tion conditions were killed when Hhe copter crashed into the icy Il linois River yesterday. Authorities Raid the craft hit two high-tension Hires. Divers pulled the bodies of Hoast Guard Lt. John F. Taylor, a ||eservist from Belleville, Ill., Petty Hbflicer 2nd Class John Johnson of Mission, Tex. and a civilian f passenger identified as William S. Bimpson of Chesterfield, Mo. from the copter. Divers continued efforts mo recover the body of Navy Lt. ijYederick W. Caeser of El Paso, S Tex. World FOUR NON-COMMUNIST op position parties in New Delhi, In dia, began a joint compaign under the label “Janta People’s Party” to oppose Prime Minister Indira Gan dhi’s ruling Congress party in the March national elections-the first to be held since a state of emergency was imposed 19 months ago. RETIRED SCHOOLMASTER Ernest Digweek, who died last Sep tember at Portsmouth, southern England, left more than $44,000 for Jesus Christ in his will published yesterday in London. If within 80 years the money is not claimed, the money will go to the crown. weather Partly cloudy today with increasing cloudiness tonight and tomorrow. Winds southeasterly at 10 m.p.h. High today in the mid 60s. Low to night in the mid 40s and high to morrow in the mid 60s. No precipi tation expected. The Battalion Vol. 70 No. 62 8 Pages Friday, January 21, 1977 College Station, Texas News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 Free enterprise program awaits decision Texas A&M University may soon provide new insight into America’s eco nomic system if A&M’s regents approve a new program aimed at research and edu cation in the free enterprise system. The new program must be approved by A&M’s Board of Regents in their meeting next Tuesday before going into effect. Under the program A&M would estab lish a center for education and research in free enterprise under the College of Lib eral Arts. It would be administered by an independent director and be staffed by University faculty members. The center would be funded by gifts and grants from sources outside the University as well as by industrial and government research projects. The A&M regents will consider a number of construction projects in addi tion to deciding on the free enterprise program in their Tuesday morning meet ing. One agenda item the regents are to con sider is a recommended $300,000 approp riation to renovate a number of A&M’s re sidence halls this summer. The renovation program is scheduled each summer to re pair damage from normal use in the resi dence halls. Other recommendations include funds for preliminary work for renovations of A&M’s Agronomy Building; construction of a clinical sciences building at A&M’s veterinary science school, and conversion of Legett Hall from a residence hall to university office space. The regents may take action on bids for improvements in Duncan Dining Hall and replacement of the A&M’s Horse Barn and Arena on A&M’s west campus. P.E. vague about concepts as graduation requirement By JOHN W. TYNES Battalion Staff Texas A&M University offers a physical education course known as P.E. concepts. Since its introduction into the P.E. pro gram, many students have taken it assum ing that it was a required course. It may not be. Dr. C. W. Landiss, head of the depart ment of health and physical education, said the purpose of concepts is to “give the student a knowledge and understanding of why physical education is important.” He said concepts offers education on some subjects that are not offered elsewhere at A&M, such as cancer and ar tificial respiration and circulation. “I have determined this is important and that’s why it’s in there,’ he added. The A&M catalog states that all students must take P.E. 101, 102, 201 and 202 and fulfill a swimming requirement. It does not state that a student must take concepts as part of the P.E. requirement. Every student who takes P.E., how ever, finds himself in concepts sooner or later. The department of health and physi cal education makes certain that everyone in required P.E. takes the course. Dr. Landiss said he wasn’t sure if a stu dent is legally required to take the course. “The question hasn’t arisen before,” he said. “I have made a note to insert it (the requirement) in the catalog.” A plan to allow students to place out of the course by taking and passing a test may be offered, he said. “It (concepts) is one of the required courses that all the people who come into the required program are channeled into,” Charles Riggs, concepts instructor, said. Riggs, who lectures all concepts classes, had 3,200 students in the course last semester and 1,750 this semester. Registrar Robert Lacey said that before a student is allowed to graduate, his rec ord is checked to see if he has taken four semesters of P.E. The man responsible for clearing stu dents for graduation by checking comple tion of degree requirements is Assistant Registrar Robert Baine. “I have no way of knowing when I clear you for graduation, whether you’ve taken concepts,” Baine said, adding that P.E. is listed on a student’s permanent record only as P.E. 101, 102, 201 or 202. There is no indication of whether a student has taken concepts. Landiss said the P.E. department does crosscheck its records to make sure a stu dent has taken the course. He admitted that some students might slip by without taking concepts, but only occasionally. Ken Robison, student legal adviser, said that as long as the department of health and physical education is meeting the course goals specified in the A&M catalog, they can ask the students to meet any de partmental requirements they want. He was unsure, however, if the Univer sity could legally keep a student from graduating merely because he has not taken concepts. “The catalog and the rules and regu lations handbook constitute a contract,” he said. He added that the catalog descrip tion of P.E. 101 through 202 is very gen eral and unspecific as it pertains to actual course activities, perhaps general enough to allow the department to require con cepts. Biofeedback relieves tension For students who cannot seem to relax or who have an annoying headache from too much studying, bio-feedback may be the answer. Bio-feedback has successfully helped people control headaches and relax. Dr. Leslie Bagnall, mechanical engineering professor at Texas A&M University, said last night during a meeting of the Texas Society of Professional Engineers. “Bio-feedback is literally a feedback of a function,” Bagnall said. The technique helps people become aware of their bodily functions. “Once people are aware of these functions, whatever they may be, most people can learn to control them, to one degree or another,” he said. “Bio-feedback consists simply of elec tronically picking up physiological functions and mirroring them back to the individual you are picking them up from,” Bagnall said. He explained that the idea behind bio feedback is to teach people to control these functions. Bagnall added, however, that bio-feedback is not a cure at all, but is becoming a “powerful tool in the armory of medicine and psychology.” “One of the most effective and useful things that bio-feedback does is teach people to relax,” Bagnall said. Relaxation training can also help to con trol headaches by lowering their fre quency and intensity, he said. “If people learn to relax, they can control simple ten sion headaches.” Bagnall reported a 75 per cent success rate in reducing headache pain. The tech nique is 80 to 85 per cent successful in reducing the pain of migraine headaches. Once people learn to relax, they are taken away from the machine. They prac tice at home and are soon able to relax without using the machine, Bagnall said. Bio-feedback also is being used to con trol high blood pressure, epilepsy, stutter ing, ulcers and insomnia. It has been found to help relieve chronic pain, such as low back pain. Pain clinics across the country are using this technique suc cessfully, Bagnall said. Bagnall said that bio-feedback offers a potentially effective alternative to the in creasing reliance on medicine. Bagnall is currently working to develop a bio-feedback center at Texas A&M in as sociation with the medical school. Carter is President, White House pomp dead United Press International WASHINGTON — Jimmy Carter of Plains, Ga., is now the nation’s 39th Pres ident and he has let it be known that White House formality is dead. Thousands of plain folks had a great time celebrating his Inauguration. The 52-year old President and his wife Rosalynn, who chose a 6-year-old gown for the occasion, danced until the early hours today to climax an inaugural festival that at every turn discarded the formal trappings that previously made the transition of power in America almost a royal cere mony. Carter took the oath of office in a con stitutionally required style, then walked to work. In an inaugural address that echoed the populist tones of his two-year campaign for the White House, Carter promised no thing but asked Americans for a “fresh faith in the old dream.” Carter dumped formality every time he got the chance during the daylong celebra tion. He wore a business suit instead of top hat and tails to the swearing-in, but he gave in and wore a tuxedo — with clip-on bow tie — to the jammed parties. Old Masters Paintings This painting and others were viewed yesterday when works from the University of Houston’s Blaffer Collection began its exhibition in the Rudder Exhibit Hall. The paintings will be on display through Feb. 18. The board will also review appropria tions for construction made by W. C. Freeman, A&M system executive officer, since the board’s last meeting in November. These appropriations include funds for a storage building at the swim ming pool, an animal science hay barn, a set of campus fire safety guidelines and campus landscaping repairs for A&M. Two fees which A&M graduate students have been paying since November 30, 1970 will receive official sanction if ap proved by the board. These are a $27.50 fee for microfilming graduate dissertations and $15 charged for binding graduate the ses and dissertations. Those fees are re quired as part of A&M’s graduate degree program. The board is also expected to accept gifts to A&M of $147,398.40;' grants of $534,461.14, and loans of $21,950. The board meeting, in the Regents Board Room adjoining the Memorial Stu dent Center, will come to order at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday and will be open to the pub lic. He was sworn in as Jimmy— not James Earle Jr., his baptismal name. He had decided weeks ago that what history has always known as inaugural balls would be called parties. Whatever they were called, protocol dictated that “Hail to the Chief’ be played when the new President and his lady came to dance — but formality met its match in the peanut farmer who now lives in the White House. Carter, who plans to wear blue jeans on weekends because they’re comfortable, dictated the folk-rock tune “Why Not the Best” — which also happened to be his campaign theme song — be played when he entered. “I love every one of you,” he said with a big smile and a wave at each crowded ball room as he traveled from party to party. “I don’t claim I know all the answers. I’m going to try and do a good job.” Vice President Mondale and his wife Joan also made the rounds of the inaugural parties. He moved into office assuming one new formality — moving into the new vice president’s mansion that was com pleted during the Nelson Rockefeller te nure but has never been lived in by a vice presidential family. Carter stuck to the formalities to the ex tent of making sure as much of his Cabinet as possible was confirmed quickly by Con gress. In an unusual session on the after noon of a presidential Inauguration, all but three of Carter’s 11 Cabinet nominees were approved by the Senate and they are expected to be confirmed next week. Inauguration day was a chilly affair for the Carters and the 350,000 lining the parade route. The temperature never rose above freezing. Letterbombs meant for Carter, Ford found by police United Press International NEW YORK — Five small letterbombs, one addressed to President Carter and another to former President Ford, were found yesterday at various post offices in Midtown Manhattan, police reported. Police said four of the incendiary de vices smouldered but none caused any damage or injuries. In addition to Carter and Ford, the bombs were addressed to Carlos Romero Barcelo, the newly elected governor of Puerto Rico, and the FBI, police said. The address of the fifth was obliterated when the device detonatd. All the bombs but the one sent to the FBI went off, police said. Local coffee prices follow national trend By DEBBIE KILLOUGH Battalion Staff Writer Coffee lovers may be looking for a substitute drink when they discover coffee prices have risen as much as $1.30 per pond. In College Station, Safeway leads with the biggest price hike, as major brands which recently sold for $1.69 per pound now sell for $2.99 per pound. Piggly Wiggly and Weingar- ten’s have maintained the lowest price increases on major coffee brands which sold for $2.39 per pound, but are now selling for $2.69 per pound. Lewis & Coker and Skaggs-Albertsons, while they have not raised prices as much as some local grocery stores, certainly rate among the highest price increases. Lewis & Coker has raised coffee prices from $2.39 per pound to $2.69 per pound, while Skaggs Al bertsons is now selling their major coffee brands for $2.99 per pound. Local grocery store managers say they have had to increase retail col- fee prices because the wholesale cost of coffee has risen to over $3.00 per pound. The grocery stores aren’t the only ones that increased prices, many major restaurants have had to raise the price of a cup of coff ee or lower the number of free refills. Shipley’s Donut Shop recently raised a cup of coffee from 20 cents a cup to 25 cents, plus 11 cents for each refill. Denny’s, once popular for their unlimited number of refills has now set a limit of two free refills. They have also raised their coffee to 30 cents a cup. International House of Pancakes seems to have maintained the best price charging 30 cents for the first cup of coffee, but retaining unlim ited refille. Coffee prices up; boycott won’t work United Press International The president of the Brazillian Coffee Institute, the manager of New York City’s 21 Club and sev eral disheartened American food wholesalers were in accord — the coffee boycott simply won’t work. General Foods Corp., the na tion’s largest coffee wholesaler, ap peared to agree yesterday. They boosted the price of ground coffee another 20 cents a pound, to a rec ord high of $3.11, in the second round of increases in a month. A group of 25 American super market executives and consumer representatives wrapped up a tour of Brazil’s frost-damaged plantations and returned to the United States with explanations — but no so lutions — for coffee prices, which they said are likely to go right on accelerating for the next two years. All agreed, lack of supplies — not a conspiracy on the part of Brazilian producers — is the villain of the scenario in which America s favorite beverage rapidly is becoming an exotic delicacy. “I don’t think a boycott will do a lot because we have to reduce con sumption by about 12 per cent, and that surely is a lot,” said Sue Ann Ritchko, director of consumer serv ices at Price Chopper Discount Foods in Schnectady, N.Y. Jorge Wolney Atalla, chairman of Hills Brothers, defended his coun try’s 285 per cent increase in coffee beans since the 1975 frost that wiped out 73.5 per cent of Brazil’s coffee trees. Camilo Calazans, president of the Brazilian Coffee Institute, was blunt in his assessment of the American boycott. “It’s picturesque,” he said. Back in New York City, at the fashionable 21 Club where cofiee and tea alike always have sold for $1.50 a pot — with unlimited refills — Manager Jerry Berns was in clined to agree with Calazans. He said the 21 Club joined the boycott — offering free tea for about two weeks. To the Brazilian man in the street, the American boycott is an affront to national honor — one re quiring an economic counterpunch. “Americans are boycotting our coffee,” a sign in a bar and restaur ant in the city of Salvador proc laimed. “Don’t drink Coca Cola. ’.