The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 29, 1985, Image 3

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Tuesday, January 29, 1985/The Battalion/Page 3
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By LYNN RAE POVEC
Stuff Writer
Students expressed negative opin
ions to Student Senate representa
tives Monday night concerning a bill
proposing a tavern on campus and
one calling for a co-ed dormitory.
Sixteen people discussed the pro
posals at the Student Government
Issues and Grievances Committee
meeting.
A Student Government survey
taken last year showed about 80 per
cent of the respondents in favor of
co-ed housing, said Brian Hay, who
represents graduate students in the
College of Agriculture.
Hay — wno sponsored the sen
ate’s resolution to encourage women
to join the Aggie Band and its reso
lution to recognize the Gay Student
Services Organization — is sponsor
ing the co-ed housing bill. He said he
based his decision to do so on the
survey results and on graduate stu
dents’ desire for on-campus hous-
ing.
The bill calls for one dorm to be
co-ed as an experiment for one year.
If the bill passes, a modular dorm
probably would be used for the ex
periment, Hay said. Students’ de
mand would determine whether co
ed housing continued to be offered.
One student said she felt co-ed
dorms at other universities she has
attended were noisy and “liberal in
moral character,” and another stu
dent said a co-ed dorm would only
encourage “harlotry.”
Students were no more in favor of
an on-campus tavern where alcohol
could be served. They said Texas
A&M has needs more pressing than
a tavern on campus.
Jim West, the representative
sponsoring the bill, was not present
at the meeting, but Wayne Roberts,
vice president of student services for
the Student Senate, spoke in West’s
behalf.
Students’ safety was West’s main
concern, Roberts said, and students
would not have to drive back to cam
pus after consuming alcohol if a tav
ern were on campus.
The tavern would generate funds
for the Student Programs Office in
the Memorial Student Center, Rob
erts said. But the main argument
against the tavern is that only seniors
and graduate students would be able
to take advantage of it since the
Texas Legislature is expected to
raise the drinking age to 21, he said.
The next meeting of the Issues
and Grievances Committee will be
Feb. 11.
Raising children
in the nuclear age
By AMY BOWMAN
Reporter
About half of the children born
today will live with one parent. This
increasing trend spurred the making
of the documentary film, “And Baby
Makes Two,” shown Monday in the
Medical Sciences Building.
The film was sponsored by the
Medicine and Society Forum, the
Department of Humanities in Medi
cine and the Learning Resources
Unit.
The film discussed niany facts and
opinions about women who choose
to bring up their children on their
own. Five women were interviewed,
all of whom chose single moth
erhood over marriage.
“To me, having a child was more
important than being married,” said
Kathy, one of the womerl inter
viewed.
The women, all of whom were
over 20, opted for motherhood as a
single parent because they felt they
were better off raising their children
without a father.
Psychologist Dr. Anna Rosenberg
said children of single mothers are
more prone to juvenile deliquency.
Rosenberg also said boys need a
male role model in their lives to help
them form their traditional sex
roles.
Many single mothers may become
too close to their children and put
them under a lot of pressure, she
said.
“The children behave like little
adults yet their maturity is defensi
ve;” Rosenberg said. “T hey’re scared
and they take on a pseudo-adult ro
le.”
The film also revealed many
problems single mothers encounter.
Many women are restricted finan
cially because they have to take care
of their children, either by them
selves or with a babysitter or day care
center.
Single mothers also must deal
with the emotional frustrations sin
gle-parenting brings, such as depres
sion and guilt.
Doux Chene Apartments
damaged by small blaze
By JERRY OSLIN
Staff Writer
A one-alarm fire struck the Doux Chene Apartments Monday af
ternoon, gutting one unit and damaging three others.
College Station Fire Department spokesman David Giordano said no
one was injured but one unit was “very extensively damaged” by fire. He
said two other units were damaged by smoke and one other damaged by wa
ter. The cause of the blaze is still under investigation, Giordano said, but the
fire started in the kitchen of the destroyed unit. The cost of the damage has
not yet been estimated, he said.
Doux Chene’s assistant manager, Debbie Saaler, said the fire started in
the stove of the destroyed unit while its occupant was visiting a next-door
neighbor. Smoke started coming through the vent of the neighboring unit
and when the occupant returned to her apartment, she found the kitchen
engulfed in flames, Saaler said.
Everyone was evacuated from the building and then the fire depart
ment was called, she said. Only two of the damaged units were occupied.
The occupants of the damaged units were given other apartments to stay in,
she said.
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FIRST MEETING
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TUES. JANUARY 29TH
8:00 P.M. 504 RUDDER^
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MSC Political Forum
Presents:
Abbie Hoffman
and
Jerry Rubin
In The
Yippie/Yuppie Debate
Two former friends, both
leading radicals of the 60’s
now find themselves on
opposite sides of the fence
one still a radical while the
other is now a successful
businessman.
They duel it out on
January 31 at 1:00
p.m. in Rudder Theater
Free Admission