Wednesday, April 10,1985/The Battalion/Page 3 v their weai >it nations i with ?n investijai Aggie elected leader of state student group tcidents ocau, exas A&M, irmed andn uch as Loin rce doesn't they don’t reateningsiti rs must face, >>' justifying campus is — now. mow?" , you never ng 14-year way to the ke control of, ook over (lie ophomort ‘ekly coh A local restaurant advertises its drink special on margaritas for-ones and more legislation is pending to restrict establish- with a roadside sign. The state has cut down happy hour two- ments from having drink specials at all. 'hite visits Texas troops at ‘Alamo’ gainst a backdrop of real-life politi- turbulence, Gov. Mark White vis- led Texas National Guard troops Tuesday at the site of a make-believe war three miles from the Nicagua- rtian border. ■ The governor’s four-hour visit to the guard base camp, T he Alamo, Began with a briefing on Big Pine 111 war games and ended with the 420 guardsmen digging into barbecue at White brought f rom home. Instead of watching maneuvers, White toured two nearby villages | where the guard has been spreading |ood will. ■ At the tiny rural cooperative of SgueVa Concepcion, where 30 fami lies eke out a living on the dusty iilain, U.S. military engineers had drilled one of nine wells for water ilsed in the Big Pine 111 exercises. ■ The Texans had chipped in to buy a hand pump for families in the cooperative. A small ceremony was held at the well in honor of the gov ernor’s visit. I White presented a brass paper- The Texans had chipped in to buy a hand pump for families in the cooperative. .4 small ceremony was held at the well in honor of the governor’s visit. weight in the shape of T exas to a barefoot village woman with a baby in her arms and another small child clinging to her skirt. “I know they’ll remember us for years to come for their well,” White said. Earlier, in El Carmen, villagers lined up in the hot sun waiting for attention from a guard medical unit, which set up a clinic for the day. Dr. Howard Axemrod, a guardsman from Mineral Wells, said he expected to see at least 300 villag ers on Tuesday. Axemrod said there was time to do little more than listen to the vil lagers’ complaints and give them cursory treatment, largely for para sites and skin problems. The Hondurans watched the gov ernor curiously. One of them, Jose Ramiro Elores, 13, said, “We want the soldiers to stay so they can give . us medicine, so they can take care of us.” Throughout White’s visit, praise was lavished on the guard by the governor and the military brass. Col. Roy Kimerling, commander of Joint Task Force XI, which is con ducting the war games, said he was impressed by the morale of the guardsmen. The Texas troops — including guardsmen from McAllen, Edin burg and Edna — were second choice for the exercises. The army initially invited California guard troops, but Gov. George Deukme- jian refused to give them permission to go to Honduras because of con cerns about their safety. Texas Adjudant General James Dennis told the troops that the “whole nation is watching you.” people motives for being down here,” Den nis said. “If we’re going to take our place in the defense of (our) nation, we must train in this fashion, be cause the way we train is the way we fight.” About 3,200 Honduran troops are taking part in the armored exer cise scheduled to begin Wednesday mornning, according to Col. Rafael Castro, commander of the Hondu ran 101st Brigade. U.S. military officials say the ob ject of the exercise is to train the Hondurans in repelling an armored assault from Nicaragua through the Choluteca Gap. White has said repeatedly that the object of his visit is to demonstrate support to the Texas troops, to as sure himself of their safety and to take them a barbecue meal. His decision to allow the partici pation of the Texas guard has been controversial because of their prox imity to Nicaragua and the current political crisis in Honduras, a power struggle between the Honduran president and the congress. By ANN CERVENKA Staff Writer A Texas A&M student was elected president of the Texas State Student Association, an organization that serves as an information network for colleges and universities in Texas. John Hatch, director of the Legis lative Study Group at Texas A&M, was elected 1985-86 president on March 30 at the TSSA spring con vention. The organization has existed un der various names since 1949. “Their role in the past has been to lobby state officials on behalf of Texas students,” Hatch said. Because members include junior colleges, two- and four-year colleges and universities, problems arose be cause the organization was expected to represent different sized schools that had different needs. Although all the schools usually agreed on issues like preventing a tuition increase, views on issues like dividing the Permanent University Fund varied, Hatch said. The Texas A&M and the University of Texas systems opposed the division of PUF because they would 'lose money. Other Texas schools favored the di- “We, Texas A&M and UT, were out-voted every time,” Hatch said. Therefore, the two schools tempo rarily pulled out of the organization. However, with the change of name to TSSA last fall, the scope of the program changed as well. Texas A&M and UT are again members. “The association is designed to be an information network for schools of higher education in Texas,” he said. The association has five officers, none of whom can be from the same school. TSSA also has a board of John Hatch four directors with a separate mem ber to represent each type of school in the association. As president, Hatch said his main job is recruitment. Of about 100 schools in Texas that are eligible to be members of TSSA because they have a student government, only about 20 are members, he said. Hatch said Texas A&M has been very involved in the organization in the past. “Being a big University, we have answered problems that some poeple are just getting involved with,” he said. For example, several schools are having problems preventing rape on campus. Several years ago, A&M created additional escort services, in stalled locks on dormitories and built additional lights on campus. Now Texas A&M is helping other schools solve this problem. Hatch said service projects, rather than legislative issues, will be the main emphasis this year unless a spe cial session is called. 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