When You’re Up To Your Neck In Trouble, Try Using The Part That’s Not Submerged. Friday — Partly cloudy. Wide ly scattered afternoon thunder showers. Southerly winds 10-12 mph. High 89, low 70. Saturday — Mostly cloudy. Afternoon thundershowers ending by 6 o’clock. High 88, low 68. Kickoff — 77°. Southerly winds 5 mph. 60% relative humidity. ol. 67 No. 156 College Station, Texas Thursday, September 28, 1972 845-2226 istinguished Military Itudents Cited Distinguished Military Student iMatus has been awarded 54 Army ^■070 cadet seniors at A&M for 1972-73 school year. [PBdMS indicates the recipient ISSis qualities the U.S. Army de- >sBres in officers. yHCol. Thomas R. Parsons, com- JHandant, said the designation is InBised on assessment of leader- nip, military and academic n landing, moral character and M ll-around development reflected R«i 1 campus and civic activities. ^■Distinguished Military Stu- Jents have completed summer ^imp and were recommended for e honor by the camp com- ander. DMS is prerequisite to Jjh'trular Army commission appli cation by ROTC cadets. Distinguished Military Stu- ftnts are Kimball B. Bannister lof Old Ocean; Gerald R. Betty of |ft)ringtown; Samuel J. Buser, JHulphur Springs; Duane E. Byrd, ||Bark A. DeHarde, Timothy T. .^^Briesenbeck Jr., Max L. Knight, J^Btephen B. Massey, Scott L. iJWarkenton and Robert L. West- l||Wolm Jr., San Antonio. Also, Joseph E. Carstens, Stu- mlrt L. Filler, Larry D. Harvey, IjBeffrey R. Murray and Gregory jj|H. Walk, Houston; Timothy V. WBoffey, El Paso; James W. Col- Bris, Omaha, Neb.; Robert W. iiW 00per ’ Ala.; James F. jWjBelony, Pasadena; Robert G. “pesher, Portland; Ronald R. juqua, Justin; Juan F. Gonzalez, f agle Pass. In addition, James F. Griffith, Lufkin; Richard B. Hall, Bell- lire; Paul C. Herrington, Pales- line; Cortlandt P. Houchard, |Villiam D. Walker and John S. fest, Dallas; Robert E. Howard II and David A. McClung, Ihreveport; Ronald J. Janak, lessing; Janies F. Kelly, Sinton; ayne E. Kruse, McGregor; Don- Id E. Lawson Jr., Alice; John Landgraf, Silsbee; James P. owe, Fort Worth; Leslie C. ^yons, Honolulu, Hawaii; Gerald [1. McMillan Jr., Angleton; Rob ert J. Miller, Breeksville, Ohio; (See Distinguished, page 2) H. ROSS PEROT, POW-MIA release activist, spoke to an overflowing Political Forum crowd Wednesday. The short, stocky computer magnate with the buck-and-a-quarter haircut predicted new operations soon from the North Vietnamese. (Photo by Mike Rice) Top Army Brass To Attend A&M-Army Game Saturday The Army-Texas A&M football game Saturday will be a gather ing of stars, specifically the type stars worn by generals. More than 12 flag officers of the U.S. Army will attend the 7:30 p.m. game. Three three-star officers will be among VIPs at. the first Texas A&M game with a service academy on Kyle Field. Lt. Gen. Patrick F. Cassidy, commanding general of the Fifth U.S. Army headquartered at Fort Sam Houston, will review the march-in to the game. Command and color guard elements of the West Point corps will join the A&M Corps of Cadets for the New Appointments, Weekend Dance Announced By CSC The newly appointed treasurer tnd day student representative for the Civilian Student Council ivill be announced tonight at 7 3.m. in the Library Conference loom. Plans for a dance this weekend n Sbisa Dining Hall after the \nny game have also been an- lounced. “Heather Black” will )erform at the CSC sponsored went. Paul Gugenheim, CSC spokes- nan, said the dance will begin ibout 10 p.m. “With Nitty Gritty Dirt Band bid the Army game, we feel that (his dance will help round out the weekend and help dispel the suit case campus syndrome.” Admission to the dance is $1.50 per couple or 75 cents stag. A 50-eent discount with dorm ac tivity cards will be honored. At tonight’s meeting the CSC will vote on plans to go, ahead with the proposed Car Care Center. Slides of the existing structures on the planned site will be shown, said Mark Blake- more, CSC president. Plans for a CSC sponsored buckle to be given in the upcom ing All Aggie Rodeo will be dis cussed, Blakemore noted. It is common practice for various organizations to donate a buckle to a winner of a selected event, he said. Upcoming events will be dis cussed and voted on by the coun cil. Some of these are co-spon soring the Sweetheart dance with the student government and the corps, plans to have a Casino after the Arkansas game and to co-sponsor a dance with the Black Awareness Committee, Blakemore said. A formal committee will be set up to plan the new constitution. Blakemore will chair the commit tee and anyone interested in working on it should check with him. :20 p.m. formation. With General Cassidy on the reviewing stand will be Lt. Gen. William A. Knowlton, academy superintendent; President Jack K. Williams and Col. Thomas R. Parsons, commandant of TAMU cadets. The West Point cadet com mander and Cadet Colonel of the Corps Ronald L. Krnavek will join the group after their staffs pass the reviewing stand. Active service generals plan ning to attend the game will in clude Lt. Gen. George P. Seneff Jr., commanding general of III Corps and Fort Hood; officers of his staff and command, and flag officers accompanying Gen eral Knowlton. The list includes Maj. Gen. James C. Smith, 1st Air Cavalry Division CG; Maj.. Gen. George G. Cantlay, 2nd Armored Division CG; Maj. Gen. Wesley C. Frank lin, deputy CG, reserve foi’ces, Fifth Southern Area; Maj. Gen. Andrew P. Rollins, deputy chief of Engineers, Washington, D. C. Also, Brig. Gen. John R. Jan- narone, dean of the academic board, U.S.M.A.; Brig. Gen. Philip R. Feir, commandant of cadets, U.S.M.A.; Brig. Gen. Charles A. Jackson, chief of staff. III Corps, Fort Hood; Brig. Gen. Charles Hill, chief of staff, Fifth Army, and Brig. Gen. O. D. Butler, the new commanding general of the 420th Engineer Brigade, head quartered in Bryan. Also among the VIPs will be Roy Smith, civilian aide to the Secretary of the Army. Other active and reserve offi cers, such as Brig. Gen. Mike P. Cokinos of Beaumont, are ex pected for the game. Gen. Co kinos, a 1943 A&M graduate, played basketball here. Local retired and active offi cers, Reserve and National Guard, will take part. They include Brig. Gen. Kay Halsell and retired Brig Gen. Spencer J. Buchanan, first CG of the 420th; Brig. Gen. Joe G. Hanover, former 420th CG, and Brig. Gen. Clifford M. Simmang, Mechanical Engineer ing Department head who also commanded the 420th. Progressive Rock Music Provided By Student-Operated FM Station j Ab ifru , n -ka T' .S' ‘ Gil AG51E f Military personnel joined A&M students with a sign suggesting the outcome of the Aggie-Army football game. The sign on the Trigon is the work of officers’ wives, Sullen Hamm, Marsha Treat, Aimee Allen and Karon Haas. Cadets refer to officers, when they aren’t within earshot, as “bulls.” By JOY McCLESKEY The only radio station to offer progressive rock in the Bryan- College Station area is run en tirely by students—B-CS FM. The station, created in re sponse to last spring’s platforms from student elections, is located at 103 full stereo FM and is only available on Midwest Video Cable. B-CS FM is on the air 24-hours a day and is being piped into Sbisa Dining Hall. Duncan Din ing Hall will soon receive the piped music service. Official university announce ments will be broadcasted by B- CS FM for on-campus students’ benefits and steps are being tak en to approve the installation of the FM cable in the Krueger- Dunn complex, but a tuner must be purchased in the meantime. Midwest Video will be offering radio-TV cable to 22 dormitory complexes on campus at mid year, as the students at A&M are important to the cable company. Midwest Video has also ex panded this year to include three new local television shows. “Platform”, shown Tuesday nights at 7 p.m. on Midwest Video Channel 9, is a discussion program on a hot-line format where students and viewers may call and voice comments and/or questions to the guest speaker. Student Government President Layne Kruse and Krueger-Dunn head residents and presidents have appeared as guests on the program thus far. Speakers such as Dr. George Beto, president of the State Pris on System and H. Ross Perot appear at 7 p.m. Wednesdays on a political forum show produced by the MSC Public Relations Committee. “Kaleidoscope” offers a bit of entertainment to Midwest Video viewers on Thursdays at 7 p.m. Spotlighted last week were high lights from the Fischer-Spassky chess tournament and a demon stration of famous moves by the Chess Committee. Every employe at Midwest Video is a student at A&M. The company is student responsive in that it offers an ‘open air’ 24- hours a day at 822-7336.” Former A&M Board Hostess Dies In Houston Mrs. W. A. Duncan, hostess to the A&M System Board of Direc tors for many years, died in Houston Sept. 13 at age 89, the Association of Former Students learned this week. She was the wife of the late W. A. Duncan, former head of food services at Aggieland for whom Duncan Dining Hall is named. He died in 1943. Mrs. Duncan had lived in Hous ton with her daughter and son- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Mims, since her retirement from Texas A&M in 1952. Burial was in Hitchcock. Banking is a pleasure at First Bank & Trust. —Adv. Massive YC Operation Is Predicted By Perot If the North Vietnamese want to influence U.S. opinion in the November election, they will con duct a massive operation near Da Nang on about Oct. 20, H. Ross Perot predicted Wednesday. “They are watching the polls, looking for the right point in time to make a move,” com mented Perot, who has used money from his ventures in com puters and investment banking to aid the cause of American prisoners of war and missing-in action. “The move will be made about Oct. 20 or thereabout, far enough ahead of the election to have an effect,” Perot hypothesized. “The plan would include cutting High way 1 to the south, infiltrating local militia and the 3rd RVN Division.” Perot said the North Vietna mese believe they will have to negotiate with President Nixon and if they do, they would rather it be before the election. The speaker stressed, in the Political Forum presentation, that the basic problem of the United States’ embroilment in the Vietnam war was, at the first, and continues to be a lack of involvement and lack of knowl edge among the vast majority of American people. “With Ho Chi Minh’s death, one man leadership in North Vietnam came to an end and the Politburo went into operation,” Perot stressed. “Did you know there are act ually factions of their govern ment that want to negotiate peace now ? There are people in their government who feel it would be better in the long-term interests of their country to be an ally of the U.S.,” Perot added. Perot also said there is a mili tary faction in the Politburo which feels there is a military solution to everything and they will fight to the last man with sticks and stones. “The North Vietnames are just waiting for the right time to negotiate with our govern ment,” he said. The peace group wants to negotiate with Presi dent Nixon when he is most vul nerable, when running for re- election, Perot said. The political polls, upon which the North Vietnamese base many of their decisions, show the Pres ident will be re-elected and must protect his image to ensure vic tory. The military group in the Politburo wanted an invasion of the South in the spring, but many of the peace aggitators felt this was going to jeopardise the peace negotiations. “First,” Perot said, “we might be able to win, if we do, there will be no need for any negotia tions. Second, short of winning, we may be able to occupy ground and negotiate from strength. “Third, if we lose, we go back to the demilitarized zone and ne gotiate from there, which is where we were to begin with. Fourth, we must make the move while Nixon is between his China Author of the best-seller, “The Cross and the Switchblade” and founder of one of America’s most successful drug addiction reha bilitation programs, David Wilk- erson, will speak at 7:30 tonight in the Bryan Civic Auditorium. Wilkerson, a minister from Pennsylvania, took his ministry to the slums after realizing he could be of more use there than any where else. His slum ministry began when he was kicked out of a courtroom for defending a group of gang sters in the Michael Farmer mur der trial. It was then that he be came a hero among New York’s 350 teenage groups. Since then, Wilkerson has work- and Russia trips because he won’t be able ti retaliate in force.” Perot noted the Russian and Chinese interest in North Viet nam is wainifig. “Russia is like we are, sick of the war,” he ex plained, “but they too are stuck because of their allies.” With Nixon’s mining of North Vietnamese harbors, the Rus sians were provided wit ha good excuse not to send arms and equipment, Perot noted. “Russia decided to send arms in by the Chinese railroad with the Chinese dedicating the rail road to that purpose.” Then the Chinese told the U.S. they could bomb the railroads right up to the Chinese border with no fear of retaliation on their part, Perot explained. ed with drug addicts, gang mem bers, prostitutes and homosexuals that fester in slum areas. Teen Challenge, was created in 1962 by Wilkerson. It claims a 74 per cent cure rate among he roin users who have completed therapy. Wilkerson says he believes in saying things “the way they are.” He has a straight forward ap proach to sex, alcohol and drug addiction. Wilkerson has pointed out that teenagers in the slums are not as hopeless as some people are led to believe, but they are lost and lonely. He has preached in streets, borrowed churches, tents and hideouts of addicts and gangs to reach these teenagers. TOBY SCHREIBER, dean of women for A&M, was the first customer of the new branch of the university’s Exchange Store, located in the Commons of the Krueger- Dunn complex. Oneta Schaudies (left) is the manager of the branch location. Applications For On-Campus Housing In Spring Available Off-campus students currently enrolled may make application for residence hall openings for the spring semester, beginning Oct. 2, announced Housing Man ager Allen M. Madeley. Application should be made at the Housing Office for both men and women he said. New appli cations must be made for each semester. The waiting list will not be carried over. A room deposit will be required for students who do not have a deposit already on file, he noted. He also reminded students on the installment board plan, the second payment is due on or be fore Oct. 3. The amount is $95.50 for the 7-day plan and $85.00 for the 5-day plan. Payment should be made at the Fiscal Office in the Coke Building. Wilkerson Speaks Tonight Krueger-Dunn Exchange Store Opens The Exchange Store-Commons Branch opened Monday with its first customer appropriately be ing a woman—Dean of Women Toby Schreiber. Exchange Store Manager Chuck Cargill said he thought it was only fitting to have a woman as the first customer in the branch located in the first coed housing complex on campus. “When we first announced that we would have a branch in the Commons, every male employee in the store voluntered to manage it,” Cargill said jokingly. To the disappointment of the male employees, the manager of the Commons Branch will be Mrs. Oneta Schaudies, a ten-year vet eran of Exchange Store service. She will be assisted by coeds from Krueger-Dunn. Prices in the branch will be the same as those in the main store, Cargill added. He empha sized that since the branch is a part of the Exchange Store, all disposable profits from the opera tion will be returned to student activities through the Exchange Store Advisory Committee. Cargill noted the store will handle such items as beauty aids, health aids and patent drugs, school supplies, magazines and paperbacks. Also on hand will be decorative posters, school spirit items, gym wear, windbreakers, gift items, decals, pennants, throw rugs, stationery and greeting cards. No textbooks will be sold in the store. Cargill and Mrs. Schaudies said they would welcome any sug gestions from the branch store customers. University National Bank “On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv.