A Top of the News Campus SENIOR CLASS RINGS or- ered during the 1976 fall mid- tester term will be ready for elivery today at the Registration lenter located in the Old Exchange tore. Rings may be picked up from a m. to noon and from 1-4:30 p.m. the Registration Center today id Monday only. Any rings not icked up by 4:30 p.m. Monday /ill be left with the Ring Clerk in ioke 7. TUESDAY, FEB. 1, is the last ly to drop courses with no records. THE DIRECTOR of Texas A&M Jniversity News Service, Jim Tndsey of College Station, was re placed on the State Banking Board [ Wednesday — four years after his Berm expired. Sam Carter of Tem ple was named by Gov. Dolph Bris- [oe to replace Lindsey. WARCON III will be staged oday through Sunday beginning at b p.m. in the MSC. Ten select games, open gaming and an auction ire featured. Registration fee is two lollars and dealer’s tables are avail- ble for the weekend for five dol- AGGIE PARENTS OF THE EAR applications are available in he Student Programs Office, MSC 16, and are being accepted now hrough March 25. Local its OFF-CAMPUS STUDENT AS- iefo BOCIATION (OCSA) organization lie plans are underway. Students in terested in helping may contact Karen Switzer, YMCA 108 or attend ImeetingThursdav, Feb. 3at8p.m. “Jin YMCA 106. Texas STATE SENATORS unani- l^pm/dy approved 104 ofGav. Dolph Briscoe’s appointees, including his selections of Garrett Morris of Fort IVorth, Alan Erwin of Baytown and fceorge Cowden of Dallas, to be the |rst members of the Texas Public Utility Commission. H.C. Bell of Rustin won reappointment as a Bexas A&M University regent. CONGRESS WASTED no time oday in starting to work on Presi- lent Carter’s request for emergency lowers to deal with natural gas hortages. Debate on the measure vas scheduled in a House energy nbcommittee and in the full Sen- ite. In the House, witnesses were iummoned to discuss where the gas s and who needs it. tN National COMMUNICATIONS EXPERTS re recommending the Postal Service se space satellites to speed mail de- iveries. They said most messages car- ied electronically would probably ome from business and government -perhaps one of every three letters, me of every three letters. MORE THAN 36 million Ameri- :ans today are living under a state of emergency declared by their gover- hors because of the worsening mergy crisis. New York, New Jer- iey and Ohio residents were warned if worse times to come. The Na- ^Wfonal Weather Service said a mass ^of cold air would bring zero and subzero temperatures to much of ^ the area during the weekend. sAi CLAUDINE LONGET’S proba tion officer has asked that the French-born singer be sentenced to no more than 30 nonconsecutive 3™ days in the county jail for the slaying of her lover, Vladimir “Spider” Sabich. Longet was convicted Jan. of negligent homicide, a mis- emeanor, in the shooting death. FIVE MEN on Wyoming’s death :ow will be spared the gas chamber because the state supreme court has ruled the state’s death penalty law is unconstitutional. The court said 3^' yesterday the Wyoming death pen alty statue failed to meet several re quirements of the latest U.S. Su preme Court decision concerning capital punishment. weather ncreasing cloudiness Friday af- ernoon, turning much colder to- light and Saturday. Wind gusts 15-25 mph this afternoon and to- ilght. High today upper-60s, low onight low-20s, high Saturday ipper-30s. J The Battalion Vol. 70 No. 66 Friday, January 28, 1977 News Dept 845-2611 6 Pages College Station, Texas Business Dept. 845-2611 City Council aids housing problem with ordinance Ry LAURA BROCKMAN The College Station City Council passed an ordinance last night which will encourage residential development to satisfy the housing demands of Texas A&M University. The proposal will amend the Zoning Ordinance No. 850 which requires a con ditional use permit for projects. This permit is contingent upon certain points, including parking provisions, maximum lot coverage and design of inter ior streets. The project plan must contain one and three-tenths off-street parking spaces for each bedroom included in the proposal or two spaces per dwelling unit, whichever is less. “This will encourage one bedroom apartments,” Councilman James Gardner said. Main and accessory buildings must not cover more than 40 per cent of the lot area. The amendment also gives the city engineer power to alter the proposal whenever the public health, safety or gen eral welfare of project residents would be endangered. The Council also passed a joint resolu tion and mutual aid agreement concerning civil disasters. “This primarily is preparing disaster contingency plans,” North Bar- dell, City Manager, said. Councilman Gary Halter questioned the resolution’s wording which “assumes that we can recover from a nuclear attack.” “Wording in this resolution is general because of national requirements,” Bar- dell said. “It is necessary that it be worded this way for us to receive the funds.” The resolution was passed by the Council with Halter opposing. Pat Baker of the “Years for Profit” pro gram presented plans for a nutrition pro gram for elderly people. “The plan is de signed to prevent isolation,” Baker said. “We don’t want to take the place of nursing homes,” she said, “we just want to keep the elderly out longer.” The program will be 90 per cent federally funded and 10 per cent locally supported by cash dona tions. People 60 years or older will be eligible to eat the noon meal and enjoy recreation at Lincoln Center. The program will start in March. Meals should begin in April. The Council also passed an ordinance which will require fire hydrants in single family and duplex districts to be no more than 500 feet from any part of the build ing. Fire hydrants in other districts will be no more than 300 feet from any part of the structure. “This will raise the density of fire hyd rants in the city,” Bardell said. A resolution favoring legislation au thorizing the use of eminent domain for coal slurry pipeline purposes was also passed by the Council last night. A copy of th is will be sent to all members of the Texas House of Representatives and Texas Senate. A study of College Station visitor opin ions was presented to the Council which proposed a brochure to inform visitors about activities in the area. Mayor Larry Bravenec said he would try to get work started on the brochure. Better coordination between Texas A&M University and the city was also suggested. Streets and directional signs were said to need improvement. College Station gets $275,000 HUD grant Speeding by By LAURA BROCKMAN Streets will be paved in four areas of College Station with the aid of a $275,000 grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The HUD funds were allocated to vari ous city improvements at the Jan. 13 meeting of the College Station City Coun cil. The sites for improvements are predom inantly low-income minority areas of the city, said James Callaway, Community Development planner. “This program proposal is based on the community development needs identified at the beginning of the City’s Community Development program,” Callaway said. “The proposed street construction proj ects for program year 1977 will solve sev eral drainage problems as well as improve circulation and access.” Roads to be improved are Avenue B, Pearce, Columbus, Preston, Georgia, De troit, Eleanor, Thompson, and Edward streets. Also Nevada Street from Detroit to Georgia will he paved. “These programs were selected on the citizen participation program,” Callaway said. “Other problems of the community that were brought up were drainage, light ing and parks and recreation areas.” The HUD funds will also be used in clearing the streets to prepare for the re paving and to insure paving specifications are met. “The code enforcement and clearance proposals are part of an ongoing program in all four of the Community Develop ment Neighborhoods,” Callaway said. HUD has certain specifications as to Woodkins granted stay execution United Press International WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Jus tice Lewis F. Powell has issued a stay of execution for Calvin Woodkins, 21, the next man in Texas scheduled to die in the electric chair. Woodkins had been scheduled to die at Huntsville Feb. 10. Powell’s stay order will remain in force until Woodkins files a formal appeal and it is acted upon by the high court. Woodkins was convicted of killing oil executive Jimmy Kukendall of Marshall. In his appeal to the court his attorneys argued he was not the person who fired the fatal shot during the Nov. 21, 1973 robbery and abduction. He said he did not receive a fair trial because he is black and because jurors who said they had reservatons about the death penalty were improperly excused. He also argued about the introduction of prejudicial but irrelevant evidence of past criminal conduct. Previous requests for a stay of execution were denied by the Harrison County trial court and the Texas Court of Criminal Ap peals. of how the money is to be distributed, but the final decision is made by the City Council. Under Title I of the Housing and Com munity Development Act of 1974, rules are listed for the eligibility of activities to be carried out under the program. Subpart C states that streets, street lights, traffic signals, signs, street furni ture, trees and other normal accessories to streets but excluding expressways and other limited access ways, may be funded by the HUD grant. “The 1976 program has just finished the engineering work and construction will begin this spring,” Callaway said. The 1977 engineering work will probably not begin until November or December. ” The bright sun and warm weather which have beset College Station the past couple of days have brought out bicycle riders who wish to take advan tage of the spring atmosphere. However, A&M Meteorologist Charlie Brenton says that a cold front is expected in this afternoon which will drop temperatures to the low 20s tomorrow morning. (Photo by Kevin Venner) Economic center established The notion that the United States is be coming a “nation of economic illiterates” has prompted a program involving Texas A&M University to establish a program involving education and research in the free enterprise system, according to the University News Services. With $300,000 as an initial gift to assist in the creation of the Center for Education and Research in Free Enterprise, the pre college program will be designed to assist Texas public schools meet the Texas Legis lature s mandate requiring all public high schools to “provide instruction in the es sentials and benefits of the free enterprise system.” The center will include a summer insti tute for high school teachers in their class presentations, minitraining programs for teachers unable to participate in the sum mer institutes, and advisory services for state agencies and local school districts. After the system was authorized by the Board of Regents Wednesday, the univer sity’s alumni organization, the Association of Former Students, and the Texas A&M Texas band) leaving for California By KEVIN VENNER Battalion Staff The people in the room could not help themselves. They were coerced to break from the norm and enter into the world of reality. In hibitions were cast aside, replaced by a desire for more of the mind- bending ingredients that put the otherwise placid crowd into their frenzied condition. Who’s to blame for distributing a medicine that put so many un tainted persons into a state of nefarious calamity and made it ex tremely enjoyable as well? It’s Balcones Fault! The Austin based band, plugged by TEXAS MONTHLY as being the “Best Show Band in Texas,” verified this designation last night at the Black Hat Saloon by seducing everyone in the bar with its musical circus act. Unfortunately, the group is about to lose its ranking as the best band in Texas...the musicians are moving to California. Barry Davis, one of the road managers of the group, said that the musicians will play a concentrated area on the West Coast and try to do as well as they have done in Texas. The eight-member band consists of two of the original five persons who started Balcones Fault five years ago. Jack Jacobs, formerly an instructor of government at the University ofTexas, plays guitar and sings lead and back-up vocals. The other original is A. Fletcher Clark III, who is the music co ordinator for the band and also the business manager, which earned him the name “numbers.” J University Development Foundation made the initial contribution. In presenting the proposal for the new center to the regents, Texas A&M officials cited a Joint Council on Economic Educa tion report which noted that 75 per cent of the nation’s college students do not take a single course in economics and that half of the nation’s 60,000 high school social studies teachers have no formal training in economics. “The danger is that a nation of economic illiterates may, through the political pro cess, unwittingly damage the economic system upon which the material welfare of the nation depends, and fail to favor mea sures that woidd enhance the viability of that system,” university officials noted in their proposal. Dr. John C. Calhoun Jr., vice president of academic affairs, said the center will draw on the resources of various parts of the university, but will be administra tively attached to the College of Liberal Arts and the department of economics will be its headquarters. It will have an advi sory board, he said, composed of busi nessmen, government officials and educators. Other center activities will include sponsorship of public conferences, short courses and workshops, and initial initia tion of a newsletter to school districts and other educational organiazations. New legislation concerns state antitrust suits United Press International AUSTIN — Special interests and lobbies are trying to force-feed consumers with legislation preventing the state attorney general from seeking damages in antitrust suits, a consumer group said today. Congress last year approved legislation giving state attorney generals the right to seek treble damages for consumers in jured by price fixing. The Texas House Judicial Affairs Committee this week ap proved a proposal by Rep. Charles Evans, D-Hurst, to repeal the federal law for the state. “An individual consumer cannot begin to afford the cost of antitrust litigation,” said Jim Boyle, executive director of the Texas Consumer Association. “The only hope to enforce the antitrust laws for consumers is with the Texas attor ney general.” Boyle said companies that are trying to fix prices or to gain a major share of a par ticular market are supporting Evans’ legis lation. “Some special interest lobbies and cer tain legislators want to quickly shove the Evans bill down the throats ofTexas con sumers at the beginning of this session,” Boyle said.