ryers
egents resolve to fight
orps discrimination suit
lams
By KEITH TAYLOR
Battalion Staff
he Texas A&M University Board of
;ents adopted a strong stand on the
anie Zentgraf discrimination suit
y by adopting a resolution stating,
P|yill defend this suit with vigor. We
to defend the University, our ad-
listrators and the Corps of Cadets
nst this misguided attack. ”
H resolution, which also stated the
varsity had violated no constitutional
;al rights, was presented at the regu-
ard meeting Tuesday,
erfgraf has named Texas A&M Uni-
iity, Jarvis E. Miller, president of
is A&M, John J. Koldus, vice presi-
r student services, Col. James R.
commandant of the Corps of
lets and Robert J. Kamensky, Cadet
anei of the Corps, as defendants in the
I suit charges that women are un-
y excluded from Corps of Cadets or-
Eions such as the Ross Volunteers,
son s Mounted Cavalry, the Texas
■Band, Rudder’s Rangers, and the
.1 Drill Team.
other business, the regents ap-
ted Marvin Tate as athletic director.
Tate has been acting athletic director since
the resignation of former athletic director
and head coach Emory Bellard on Oct. 24,
1978.
The regents also appointed T.R.
Greathouse as vice president of interna
tional affairs.
The international affairs office adminis
ters all Texas A&M programs in foreign
countries and services offered to foreign
students, faculty and staff.
The regents authorized the creation of
the Center for Strategic Technology to be
administered by the Texas Engineering
Experiment Station. The establishment of
the center was prompted by the U.S. Air
Force.
The center will work with the Air Force
on defense policy studies.
The center will also work the Depart
ment of State, the Office of Technology
Assessment, the Department of Com
merce, the Department of Housing and
Urban Development, and congressional
committees.
The regents also authorized the creation
of the Institute of Occupational and
Environmental Medicine.. __
The institute will offer programs and in
struction in the field of occupational
medicine and health.
Dr. Robert S. Stone, dean of medicine,
will direct the institute.
The regents also awarded over $5 mil
lion in contracts to various contractors for
construction work around the state.
Jordan and Woods General Contractors
Inc. of Bryan was awarded a $2,430,430
contract to renovate the mechanical engi
neering shops building.
Loyd Electric Co. Inc. of San Antonio
received $1,229,400 contract to do lighting
and power work on the Prairie View A&M
University campus.
The regents endorsed room and board
increases for Prairie View A&M, Tarleton
State University, and Moody College.
The new rates will go into effect in the
fall.
Texas A&M was authorized to raise its
student service fees to $1.92 per semester
hour. The diploma fee will be raised from
$8 to $11.
The regents also approved new shuttle
bus rates. The student rate will be $30,
student and spouse permits will be $45,
and faculty-staff rates will be $40.
This rates will also take effect in the fall.
HE
Partly cloudy and warm with a
high in the mid 80’s and a low near
70. Winds will be north-easterly at
5-10 mph. The amount of rainfall
recorded for Monday evening and
Tuesday morning was 3.92 inches
reported by Easterwood Airport.
Battalion
•• Owlet
Hoice Beef
Vol. 72 No. 152
10 Pages
Wednesday, May 23, 1979
College Station, Texas
News Dept. 845-2611
Business Dept. 845-2611
Texas A&M President Jarvis Miller looks over Bob Clyde Wells look over resolution at the Board of Regents
Cherry’s shoulder as Clyde Freeman and Chairman meeting Tuesday. Battalion photo by clay Cockrill
Egyptian borders closed
despite return of El Arish
im - Bulk:
apped fiiffler of an ordeal
United Press International
Egypt said Tuesday its borders with Is
rael will stay closed even after it gets back
the unofficial capital of the Sinai, El Arish,
Friday.
Israel also took a hard-line stance, with
the Cabinet Monday accepting Prime
Minister Menachem Begin s plan of only
limited administrative autonomy for the
Palestinians.
In Beirut, leftist sources said Israeli
troops Monday thrust into Lebanon for the
second time in three days and said
Israeli-backed Christian militias shelled
U.N. positions in the frontier region.
The sources said-said Israeli soldiers
backed by tanks and armored personnel
carriers took up positions near the border
Boneless
Killer Bees reflect on successful walkout
Boneless
United Press International
USTIN — The “killer bees” five-day
â– it in a cramped one-room apart-
it proved to be a “killer” of an ordeal,
Mussing senators told reporters on
riumphant return to the Capitol
toy.
e had one toilet and one telephone
â– If of them kept wanting to trade the
;t for another telephone,” said Sen.
I Parker, D-Port Arthur. “Nine of us
gotten to know each other a lot bet-
e 12 senators, who attracted national
mtion with their successful efforts to
"p Texas Rangers and a statewide bul-
a for their arrest, said all but three re
ined together in Austin the entire time
Hpngle room at a “sort of a garage
fitment. '
le lawmakers refused to reveal the lo-
0 *""$ ion of the Austin residence where they
_ J l out to avoid possible retaliation against
""Wend who sheltered them.
•We shared one room. We had one hot
al,’ Parker said.
Sen. A.R. Schwartz, D-Galveston, who
looked wom and tired despite the jubilant
welcome supporters gave the returning
lawmakers, said there were not even beds
for all nine senators to sleep.
The three senators who left Austin,
Sens. Gene Jones, D-Houston; Raul Lon
goria, D-Edinburg, and Chet Brooks,
D-Pasadena, also declined to specify
where they hid.
“I was in Oklahoma most of the time
until I was elected prime minister and
came back to negotiate,” Brooks said.
The Pasadena senator said he returned
to the Capitol late Monday for a secret
meeting with Hobby to work out arrange
ments for the return of the “killer bees.”
Sen. Gene Jones, D-Houston, said he
spent most of the time in Houston staying
with friends “who took care of me and
made me feel like Robin Hood.”
Jones narrowly escaped arrest Sunday,
however, when Rangers came to his home
but nabbed his older brother by mistake
while the senator escaped out the back
door and climbed over an eight-foot fence.
Longoria said he had been excused from
attending Friday’s Senate session and was
in district court in Hidalgo County when
he learned of the bulletin for the arrest of
missing senators and went into hiding be
cause, “I was under no circumstances
going to allow the Texas Rangers to hand
cuff me and bring me back to Austin.”
“I’m not going to say where I was be
cause I think I may have to use the same
place again,” Longoria said.
Senators said there was never any prob
lem about some of the 12 breaking off and
returning to the Capitol without the others
^because, “There are 12 honest people that
gave each other their word and stuck with
it.”
Schwartz said police never came close to
discovering the secret hide-away al
though, “They almost talked me out
once.”
Sen. Tom Creighton, D-Mineral Wells,
before the missing senators returned
Tuesday said he believed Schwartz, a
loquacious lawmaker, must be seriously ill
to remain in hiding and miss the opportu
nity to speak on national television.
“When Sen. Creighton announced this
morning that the national press was there,
he was right,” Schwartz laughed.
Senators wives, many of whom had not
seen their husbands since last Thursday,
brought fresh clothes to the secret hideout
and to their Capitol offices less than an
hour before their climatic reentry into the
Senate chamber.
*
Schwartz, who went into hiding without
a toothbrush or a supply of medicine to
control his diabetes, said he ordered his
prescription refilled at an Austin pharmacy
and had the package picked up by an in
termediary.
Although some wives visited the hidea
way, most did not know where their hus
bands were staying.
The “killer bees” said “very few” people
knew where they were.
“We blindfolded half of the senators
who were there, Schwartz said.
AIN
RTISEO
heavy di
>f an ad
;t ask our
ck
you the itei
oon as new
Planting a star
village of Chebaa but following contacts
with Norwegian U.N. troops in the area,
the Israeli units withdrew.
An Egyptian government spokesman
contradicted Begin’s statement in Cairo
last month that the borders would be de
clared opened after he meets with Egyp
tian President Anwar Sadat Sunday at El
Arish.
The spokesman, in a statement pub
lished Tuesday by the newspaper Al
Ahram, said there would be no free
movement between the Sinai town and Is
rael for at least nine months.
The statement said Israelis will not be
allowed into El Arish, and the Egyptian
inhabitants of the Mediterranean town will
not be permitted to travel to Israel for
work.
The spokesman said free movement be
tween El Arish, captured by Israel in the
1967 Middle East war, and Israeli-
occupied territories “will be part of the
normalization of relations which will not
start before nine months.”
The Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty stipu
lates that the two countries should open
talks on normalizing their relations nine
months after exchanging ratification
documents.
Diplomatic sources say Egyptians are
using the “normalization of relations” as
their trump card for pressuring Israel to
soften its position in negotiations on Pales
tinian autonomy, scheduled to open Fri
day at Beersheba, a town in Israel’s Negev
desert.
Egypt wants a Palestinian autonomous
authority to have political, judicial, legisla
tive and administrative powers, leading
after a five-year transitional period to self-
determination and a Palestinian state.
But Israel’s Cabinet Monday accepted
Begin’s plan of granting orjy administra
tive autonomy to the Palestinians in the
occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip de
spite the objections of Defense Minister
Ezer Weizman and Foreign Minister
Moshe Dayan.
The two powerful ministers, who
headed the Israeli team in the treaty talks
with Egypt, asked to be excused from the
six-man Israeli negotiating unit on Palesti
nian autonomy but their request was
turned down.
Sadat and Begin will board an Egyptian
Boeing 707 Sunday, fly to Tel Aviv and
back to Cairo without landing in either
capital before returning to El Arish.
An Egyptian government spokesman
said the flight will symbolize tlie opening
of air space between Egypt andTsrael, but
said regular flights between the two cities
“will also be part of the normalization of
relations.”
The spokesman said the Egyptians are
seeking to sever telephone links between
El Arish and Israel and terminate water
and electricity supplies feeding the city
from Israel.
Depression epidemic
among drivers, says
California psychiatrist
â–ºores, Inc-
! Prieve supervised the planting of the garden in front of the Academic
luilding last week. When the bronze and green varieties of the “Joseph’s
Coat” mature, they will form the familiar Texas A&M star. Making up
the flower crew from front to back are Debra Baker, Corrine Bergee,
Christa Neef, and Connie Chriss.
Battalion photo by Clay Cockrill
United Press International
Anxiety over possible gas shortages dur
ing the Memorial Day weekend is causing
an epidemic of depression among drivers,
a West Coast psychiatrist says, but rest as-*
sured — the U.S. isn’t “going down the
tubes.” Even Southern California’s long
gas lines are easing.
California gas stations, swamped with
lines of up to 100 motorists just last week,
had shorter lines Monday, an “odd” day in
the state’s rationing plan.
One station in the Los Angeles suburb
of Glendale had no cars waiting in line at
one point in the afternoon, a rare sight
since May 1. The manager of a station in
House OKs
mortgage
legislation
United Press International
AUSTIN — The Texas House Tuesday
approved and sent to the governor legisla
tion abolishing the state’s historic 10 per
cent interest ceiling on home mortgage
loans and establishing a new ceiling that
would allow interest rates to rise as high as
12 percent.
Representatives refused, however, to
give the bill the 100 votes necessary to put
it into immediate effect when it is signed
by the governor. It was approved 92-41
with 10 members voting present.
Without the 100 votes, the bill will go
into effect Aug. 28, 90 days after the ses
sion ends at midnight Monday.
The House previously had approved the
bill, and Tuesday’s vote was to accept Se
nate amendments in the proposal estab
lishing a floating interest ceiling 2 percent
higher than the interest rate on 10-year
U.S. Treasury Bonds, with a maximum of
12 percent.
Gov. Bill Clements, who initially vowed
to veto any bill allowing higher interest
rates on home loans, reversed that posi
tion because the Federal National Mortg
age Association curtailed its purchase of
FHA and VA loans in Texas.
Clements said that action jeopardized
the state’s homebuilding industry and
made it extremely difficult for most Texas
families to obtain financing to purchase a
new home.
the Hollywood area marvelled that he had
run out of cars before gas.
Still, one motorist reported waiting 73
minutes in line at a Burbank station and
reported seeing lines “wrapped around
the block” at two others. “It’s gloomy, it’s
dismal and it’s expensive,” he said.
In addition, gas supplies for the long
Memorial Day weekend, the traditional
start of the summer vacation period, were
questionable in some regions of the na
tion.
In Ohio, the director of the 1,000-
member Northeastern Ohio Petroleum
Dealers Association said 73 percent of its
members would close this weekend. More
than half of Pennsylvania’s stations plan to
close. Other states fretted about shortages
should supplies not arrive in the next few
days. Las Vegas officials even planned to
install a “hot line’’ to help drivers find
open stations.
The Lundberg Letter, an authoritative
petroleum newsletter, added to the dismal
news Monday by reporting that the
Energy Department is considering four
proposals that would boost pump prices by
between 1.3 cents and 6.8 cents a gallon
above current levels.
The gas shortage and resulting gas lines
and high prices are, says Dr. John L.
Schwartz, chief of psychiatry at Santa
Ana-Tustin Community Hospital, foster
ing an epidemic escalation of anxiety and
depression.
“Here we are,” he said, “rich America
and we can have anything. It turns out,
even though we are the richest country in
the world, there are finite quantities of re
sources.
“We are all undergoing a loss of our ex
pectations and this is making people de
pressed.”
In feet, said Schwartz, some Califor
nians are behaving in irrational and
dangerous ways because anxiety has
superceded their judgment in the de-
cisonmaking process.
The heartening news is the end result
may be a healthier society, he said. “I am
not saying the United States is going down
the tubes. It is not.”
Schwartz said the answer lies in our abil
ity to turn inward, to appreciate “what is, ”
rather than “what is not,” and in recogniz
ing the ability of our technology and
people to deal with problems.
“I hope we will all exercise the wisdom
of appreciating what we have — take time
to smell the flowers,” he said.