The Battalion Ol. 72 No. 64 6 Pages in 2 Sections News Dept. 845-2611 Business Dept. 845-2611 Monday, December 4, 1978 College Station, Texas Spotlight on the ‘A’ in ‘A&M’ The Agriculturist, a special supplement in today’s Battalion, focuses on agriculture at Texas A&M University. Mule trainers, a student body president, a win ning rodeo team, rodeo clowns and a state rodeo queen are some of the features. The magazine is edited and produced by agricul tural journalism students under the direction of the Agriculturual Communicators of Tomorrow Club. l&M hosts national arm conference By STEVE LEE Battalion Campus Editor he Agricultural Council of America A) and Texas A&M University are nsoring the first National Farm Sum- Conference at Rudder Center begin- today and continuing through mid- Wednesday. he summit could assume national sig- jance since more than 400 leaders rep uting different segments of the farm- ndustry were expected for this ning’s convening. The stated purpose ie summit is to arrive at agreement on tions to economic problems facing the ner today. he conference centers around a series task force reports, the culmination p to a year’s planning by each group, scheduled to speak at the summit are tier Texas governor and cabinet jiber John Connally and Sen. Robert e, R-Kan. Connally is scheduled to ak this afternoon at 12:30 after a lunch- Room 224 of the Memorial Student ter. Dole will speak Tuesday night fol- ng dinner at the Ramada Inn ball- ,&M to he oliday inn terim housing will be provided for stu- s who remain at Texas A&M Univer- over the Christmas break, said Ron E. e, associate director of student affairs. 3rty-four spaces will be available in hmacher Hall for students currently in lence halls and who have also reserved m for the Spring Semester. It will cost ents $75 for rooms during the holiday Sasse said eligible students must and pay the fee at the Housing e in the YMCA building, ie registration period begins Wednes- and continues through next Tuesday, 12. Sasse said room assignments will ade between 1-5 p.m. on Friday, Dec. n Lounge A-2. Each task force was led by noted academic figures and will suggest solutions to problems in a particular area. At the summit the findings of each task force will be summarized by the group’s chair man. A panel of experts on each topic will react to the reports and then the floor will be open for discussion. The first report to be discussed at this morning’s session was scheduled to center upon international trade. After Connally’s speech this afternoon, a task force report dealing with nutrition, product quality and safety is schedided at 2:30. Subsequent reports on Tuesday and Wednesday will concern resource use and product costs, farm commodity prices and income, and agriculture’s role in govern ment decisions. As an interesting footnote to the sum mit, about 200 members of the American Agriculture Movement (AAM) have driven about 50 grain trucks from as far away as Wyoming to the summit to hold a three- day rally. They will eventually drive to the Port of Houston to market their grain themselves, they say, to demonstrate that no middleman is needed to do the job. Regarding the summit itself, AAM members say that not enough producers will be present to provide needed policy change ideas. In a statement released last week, summit officials rebuted the argument, saying that several members of tbe AAM have been members of the task forces as signed for the conference. Monday 12:30 p.m. — Luncheon, John Con nally — Room 224 MSC 2:30 p.m. — Task Force Report — Nutrition, Product Quality and Safety — Rudder Theatre 3:45 p.m. — Task Force Reaction — Rudder Theatre Tuesday 9 a.m. — Task Force Report — Re source Use and Production Costs — Rudder Theatre ueen of the rails’ six in crash f, United Press International pLMA, Va. — The luxurious Southern pcent, queen of America’s passenger fes, derailed in rural Virginia Sunday, aming silver cars, in a wild tumble i'n a steep embankment, piled on top of In other like toys. Tt least six people were killed and as »y as 60 others injured, five critically. ICrescent cook, Roosevelt Martin, was Jpe kitchen and had just begun to pre- p breakfast— bacon, eggs and sausage, muffins and grits — over the train’s stoves. he first call for breakfast — at 6 a.m. Pday — W as only 20 minutes away, pdore Coleman, 64, of Atlanta, a wai- Itor 38 years with Southern, was setting I tables. fuddenly, three of the train’s four pmotives and all eight passenger cars [j|Ped the tracks near Elma, a rural town v ay between Charlottesville and Lyn- purg. |I was just standing there by the re- prator and then all of a sudden every- jig came flying forward,” said Martin, u 0 Was treated for minor injuries at 'University of Virginia Hospital. L ^tin said he was momentarily buried | er ° e bris and trapped in darkness, but |' v as able to escape the wrecked car pugh a window. Neman escaped serious injury but his htional uniform of white coat and black w as bloodied. e dining car was split in half. Two (s . w ® re trapped beneath the stove, oithem Lewis Price, of Atlanta, died, other, Med Haynes, of Atlanta, was person pulled from the wreck than 11 hours later. L e lining car and the baggage car were pooped and rolled down the embank- ® > parallel to the track. A sleeping car L p in to the dining car perpendicu- T fl ° r ITlan sa i < d if the accident had oc- „ e , a few minutes later after breakfast oeing served, the toll would have R much higher. 16S ^ Ue crews worked throughout Sun- '■& V mes i n a driving rain, to remove j ea d and dying, some of them pinned . er the twisted metal. L S ^ Ue efforts were hampered by the JT terrain and the steep embank- [ > which dropped sharply from the Bill Tk° a 40 ' foot gully, id r 10m P s °n, a member of the Rose- escue Squad, was one of the first on ; ^ene. j 0 i got there, there was mass con- Th n0t mass hysteria,” he said, jjj ?P ass engers were still all in the 1 « , e got most of them out through Endows.” The whole idea behind the Crescent, the last of America’s long-distance pri vately owned passenger trains, has been to keep alive a dying tradition of quality passenger service. Since 1926 the Crescent has plied the rails between Washington and New Or leans. Its dining car, with silver tableware and pitchers, was its trademark. It had crisp, white linen tablecloths, fresh carna tions on each table, and excellent South ern cuisine cooked on wood stoves. 10:45 a.m. — Task Force Reaction — Rudder Theatre 1:30 p.m. — Task Force Report — Farm Commodity Prices and Income — Rudder Theatre 3:15 p.m. — Task Force Reaction — Rudder Theatre 7 p.m. — Dinner, Robert Dole — Ramada Inn ballroom Wednesday 8:30 a.m. — Task Force Report — Ag riculture’s Role In Government Deci sion — Rudder Theatre 10 a.m. — Task Force Reaction — Rudder Theatre 11:30 a.m. — Summit Review — Rudder Theatre 12:30 p.m. — Adjournment These grain trucks, some coming from as far as Wyoming, were driven by farmers Sunday to pro test the National Farm Summit Conference here. Battalion photo by Steve Lee After the conference, which begins today, the farm ers will travel to the Houston Ship Channel to sell their grain in person, without middlemen. Tornadoes cause $100 million damage Lousiana, Arkansas ravaged United Press International BOSSIER CITY, La. — Rare winter tor nadoes spawned by unseasonably warm weather dropped like deadly bombs across northern Louisiana and southern Arkansas Sunday killing four persons, injuring hun dreds of others and causing more than $100 million in property damage. The killer tornadoes struck in the pre dawn darkness out of a thick line of thun derstorms leaving a trail of destruction from the red-clay banks of the Red River to the industrial community of El Dorado, Ark., 100 miles to the northeast. The worst hit of the half dozen southern communities was Bossier City in northwest Louisiana, across, the. Red River from Shreveport, where state police said two young girls were killed and more than 180 persons were injured — at least three dozen severly. More than 1,500 persons were left home less. A third fatality was reported at Heflin, La., a small farming community near Bos sier City where six persons were injured. A fourth person was killed in El Dorado when a frame house was demolished by a dozen trees uprooted by the winds. Another half dozen people were injured in that Arkansas town. Officials called the low death toll “a mira cle.” “The amazing thing about this disaster is the amount of damage to buildings — the structural damage throughout the area — and the so few casualties,” said Maj. Gen. O.J. Daigle Jr. of the Louisiana National Guard. “When you fly over and see some of these houses completely dismanteld you wonder how so few died. I’d say there was over $100 million worth of damage. ” Bossier City mayor Marvin E. Anding confirmed the money estimate and said the city was spared by God from more misery. “He must have been with us. I can’t be lieve we only had two deaths with the mis erable mess we have out there,” he said. Authorities partially credited the end of the horse racing season for the low fatality figures. The Bossier City tornado leveled a nearly vacant motor hotel on the city’s east side near the track, injuring about 60 per sons. A week earlier, the hotel, the city’s largest with a capacity of several hundred, would have been packed with visitors. Anding said about 65 residential build ings, including one large apartment Com plex, were destroyed in the two-block wide, eight-mile long path of the giant tor nado. The mayor also said some looters had been arrested. “I cannot believe that we did have some attempts at looting 20 minutes after the tornado passed through the heart of Bos sier, ” Anding said. T’m not going to have people and their homes and businesses looted. We are going to deal with these people as severly as pos sible.” National Guardsmen, armed with rifles and billy clubs, patrolled the area at night fall. The mayor said a 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew would be imposed for the city “until further notice.” “We have the entire Bossier City area sealed off,” said state trooper Harold Car penter. “Only emergency people and people who can actually prove they live in Bossier City can get in.” The Bossier City storm struck at 1:50 a.m. Sunday dropping down northeast of the Red River and leveling homes, schools, trees and businesses. “At that time of night, there’s not much warning,” said civil defense director W.C. Eberhard. “It developed so fast. It’s the most mas sive tornado a National Weather Service radar operator had seen in many a day.” Although tornadoes generally are rare in December, weather forecasters said the Gulf State area was ripe for their develop ment because of the equally unusual Indian summer the area had been experiencing for the past week. Temperatures had climbed into the 80s Saturday and humidity ho vered around the 90 percent mark in most areas. “Tornadoes are not that unusual consid ering the weather,” said Herbert Roseman, the NWS forecaster based in Fort Worth. “Although they are most numerous in the spring, Louisiana and other Gulf Coast states can have them any time of the year. “Yesterday and last night we had warm moist air colliding with a very sharp cold front. It produced a very unstable air condi tion — thunderstorms developed east and south of Dallas intensified very rapidly and headed northeast. The tornadoes were an obvious end result,” he said. Lesson learned the hard way: door no protection from tornado United Press Internationa! BOSSIER CITY, La. — A serviceman on a cross-country trip to a new assignment said he sought protection behind a motel room door but both he and the door were flung across the room by a Sunday’s tor nado. “I was sleeping and I heard like a thun der,” said William Carserino, who was spending the night at a Best Western motel that was destroyed by the storm. “I guess it was setting down. And then I heard the rattling and stuff at the window and I thought it was raining real hard. I got up to look out and about that time the window came through. And then I ducked behind the door. “Next thing I knew, I flew with the door across the room and landed on top of the kids. And that quick it was over.” Carserino and his family were traveling from San Diego, Calif., to his new Navy assigment on the East Coast. They also planned to visit relatives in Jackson, Miss., during the trip. The motel was one of the most severely damaged structures. Carserino said guests reacted quickly after the storm passed, “‘We started bringing out the kids, the dog and everything. And we, the Carserino family, all came through surviving all right. It quieted down real quick and we just started gathering what we could and get ting out of there. “Everybody was injured a little bit, beat up, bruised a little bit. Everything we had in our room — trash cans and all — landed on top of the kids. “Our car was demolished. It looked like the roof from on top of the upper floor landed on top of three or four cars over there.” Carserino and his family were treated at Bossier General Hospital and released. Report reveals politics does pay Pickin’ and grimacing Ian Matthews concentrates on a chord during his performance at G. Rdlie White Coliseum Thursday night. Matthews was the openmg act of a program that included David Gates and Bread. A rev.ew of the concert ,s prog! ax Battalion photo by Lee Larkin on page 6. United Press International WASHINGTON — Some of America’s highest paid government officials — with scores of them making hefty salaries of $50,000 a year or more — aren’t elected by the people, appointed by the president or selected by tests. The well-heeled officials work for the U.S. Senate, which paid hundreds of staff members such as administrative aides, press officers and secretaries salaries of more than $40,000 annually in 1978. The figures are in the 1,110-page, green-covered Report of the Secretary of the Senate, which came out last week with salary listings for the lowliest summer intern to the mightiest committee staff chief. Only the other Green Book — Washing ton’s version of the social register — affords as much interest, though it has only a frac tion of the useful information in the secre tary’s report. Senators earn $57,500 a year, but just below them are 64 aides pulling in $50,000 or more and another 331 who make more than $40,000. In comparison, cabinet offi cers get $66,000 and top civil servants $47,500. The secretary’s report said the Senate paid some 7,000 employees $51.3 million in the last six months of fiscal 1978. In addition, the the Senate spent $13.1 mil lion on office expenses and travel, compil ing a total bill of $82.9 million. The House employs about 11,000 people and would spend more due to its larger membership. But in general, individual Senate salaries are higher. The top paid staff people at $52,500 are Secretary of the Senate J. Stanley Kimmitt, Sergeant at Arms F. Nordy Hoffman and Legislative Counsel Harry Littell. Right behind them is Secretary to the Minority William F. Hildenbrandt at $52,000. Nine other offiicals — including Kimmitt’s assistant, the parlimentarian and the clerk who compiled the figures — earn $51,500. Following them at $50,478 is George F. Murphey, head of the office of Classified National Security Information. Although the law limits top pay for a senator’s office aides to $49,941, the report lists 21 committee or subcommittee staff chiefs and two Republican and one Demo cratic policy staffers who earn between $50,000 and $52,000. There are 26 top personal aides — most of them called administrative assistants — making the maximum, $49,491. Others earning above $40,000 include four persons in the legislative councils, 41 who work for Kimmett or Hoffman, 161 on committee staff and 125 on senators’ per sonal staffs. The size of a senator’s staff and the salary levels are up to the the lawmaker himself, within limits based on the state’s popula tion. Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., had 156 persons on his six-month payroll at a cost of $282,701 while retiring Sen. William Scott, R-Va. — always a low spender — got by with 19 persons for $140,347, less than half his allotment. California’s two senators were entitled to spend $510,583 for the six months — plus up to $149,000 extra for certain committee specialists. Sen. S.I. Hayakawa, R-Cal., paid 111 persons $555,148 in the period, while Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Cal., paid 71 persons $516,159, plus $59,607 to five others given to him because he is assistant Democratic leader. Sens. Abraham Ribicoff, D-Conn., Adlai Stevenson, D-Ill., and Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., each had five staff members paid at an annual rate of more than $40,000. The lowest paid top aide, at a rate of $28,550, was Oregon Republican Sen. Mark Hat field’s personal secretary. Press secretaries, whose functions range from shaping a senator’s image to deliver ing publicity releases, earned from $16,100 to $49,941 a year. Most of the book — 900 pages — is de voted to listing every expense voucher — from 30 cents for a copy of the New York Times for the Senate library to $108,846 to pay July’s telephone bill. A&M official charged with DWI in Austin Harold Lee “Spec” Gammon, sports information director for Texas A&M University, was charged with first offense driving while intoxicated in Austin Thursday night. Gammon was stopped by police about 9 p.m. in the 4600 block of Interstate 35. Gammon was charged before Municipal Court Judge Alberto Gar cia. He was released on a personal recognizance bond.