lATTAUQ igb Aggies, with), ff Overhouse have excellentfi in talented sseph andJCtti ithrie. Josepk h had 14 rel and folloij Bob Gobin^tl) oroken hand, sh >r Wayne ;e Floyd and T ( id out the s Saji ay k In 7; Ross Volunteers: A&M’s Oldest Tradition - Rich Organization A 21-gun salute by A&M’s Ross Volunteers’ Firing 1 Unit is har monized with the bugle’s sound of “Silver Taps” in traditional re- jpect for the death of an Aggie. Silver Taps is just one of the many Ross Volunteers’ activities. The volunteers were organized in making it the oldest student organization at A&M and one of (he oldest in the state. Originally they were called the Scott Volunteers in honor of Col. T, M. Scott, who at the time of ^ organization, was the business manager of the college and spe- tial representative to the Board Directors. In 1891, the name of the com- iny was changed to Ross Vol unteers in honor of then A&M Lawrence Sullivan The name of the organi- jation changed twice after the death of Ross in 1898, but re turned to its original name in at the request of A&M Pres ident H. H. Harrington, son-in- law of Ross. “The company consists of three platoons,” said Bill Walker, com pany commander. “The tallest members of the company belong to the First Platoon or ‘Trees’, the medium-height members to the Second Platoon or ‘meatballs’ and the short members to the “Third Platoon or ‘Squats’.” “Corps members can apply for a junior position in the volunteers and are chosen by senior com pany members,” said Walker. “Not more than 90 juniors are elected each year.” “Company members are chosen on the basis of personal charac teristics and leadership,” contin ued Walker. “They must also maintain a 2.30 grade point ratio.” “Being a member of the firing squad is the most sacred priv ilege granted to a member of the Ross Volunteers and the greatest or highest honor one can ever ’> — Wayne Hu southern Metis 3 the fifth leei in the South h one game .s a freshman e may not coat reer. g over what It r,” Morris g News this vi ve suffered p gh they are ad nt.” w whether me to my sta )me back Che Battalion achieve while at Texas A&M,” said John Adams, administrative officer for the volunteers. The firing unit is named at the spring banquet which is prior to April 21 each year. The firing squad is composed of 21 second classmen and commanded by the Company Executive Officer. Each platoon elects seven mem bers with one alternate for mem bership on the team. This year Mike Thun, executive officer, is commander of the Firing Unit. “Activities for the R.V. Com pany begin each year in the fall with the Induction Banquet for juniors,” said Adams. At this time juniors are sworn-in, and receive their ribbons and cords. The rest of the fall consists of drilling and training the newly- initiated juniors. Every other year the Company attends the January Inauguration of the Governor of Texas and presides as his Honor Guard for Good Thoughts, Even If They Are Forgotten, Do Not Perish. the occasion. The group will see a new governor inaugurated in 1973. The Ross Volunteers attend the Mardi Gras each year where they are the lead element in the King Rex Parade. The new 21-member firing squad is named at the spring banquet which is followed by Parent’s Weekend later in April. This is the company’s last pre sentation of the year. Outstanding junior cadets from each platoon and the company are presented. The year concludes for the R.V.’s with Muster on April 21. “On April 21, which is the anniversary of the Battle of San Jacinto, Aggies everywhere gath er together to pay tribute to departed Aggies for the previous year,” said Adams. “This happens wherever there are Aggies, regardless of what day it is,” he continued. “Two or more Aggies are all it takes.” TUESDAY — Continuing fog. Occasional light rain and driz zle. Partly cloudy and windy afternoon. Chance of showers. High 66, low 38. WEDNESDAY Vol. 67 No. 191 College Station, Texas Tuesday, December 5, 1972 High of 52. 845-2226 High Court Agrees To Decide Residence Issue ie wants to til e” before decil ill career and s to do over ap nt to play lue chipper Ii :f High Sck ned 827 yards a Southwest C er. ird for me to r system. I've ocking morel i primarily a i n’t enjoy blot! ! than runninj, strated.” n Fry saidkt lorris’ future i e first year is for any toll at by your In not so diffifl hink Wayne more year e« WASHINGTON > — The Su preme Court agreed Monday to rale on higher tuition fees for niit-of state college students—an We that could have heavy im pact on fees paid by all students it state-supported colleges. The case accepted for review next spring comes from Con- aecticut. There a three-judge iourt held students who had set ap permanent residence could not le charged the higher fees for the length of their academic ca reers. Possibly riding on the outcome the $200 million to $400 million tollected by the states in non-resi dent tuition each year. If the justices agree with the panel in Hartford, all students in state colleges may wind up paying high er tuition. The Connecticut tuition system was challenged by two students. One married a University of Con necticut student and moved into the state from California. The second was a graduate student who moved from Ohio. The fees, established by the state legislature last year, allow local residents to attend the uni versity at Storrs for $175 a year, but charge out-of-state students $975. The three-judge court in Hart ford in striking down the system last June, said that even if a higher tuition is reasonable at the start it is wrong to charge this higher rate throughout the stu dent’s academic career. Connecticut appealed. It told the Supreme Court the Constitu tion gives states “a wide range of discretion in enacting laws which affect some of the residents differently from others.” Although not involved in the Connecticut case, the new law ex tending the vote to 18-year-olds has deepened the problem of non resident tuition. If a state grants a student the right to register and vote in his college town, many educators see this as a prima facie evidence of residence in the state which would carry with it exemption from the higher non resident tuition. A&M’s ‘Coach Bum’ To Share Philosophy Specials ening Fisli 52.00 xm Lunch .00 iekend Rate & Students 6-5794 erosa r Inn k Bumgardner, 1947 All- America end at the University Texas and now “brain coach” for A&M, will share his sports philosophy and colorful back- fround with the Brazos County A&M Club at the final 1972 meet ing Wednesday. Club president John West noted the Wednesday evening program includes election of 1973 officers. Activities begin at 6:39 p.m. at \llende Says ITT Attempting To Start Chilean Civil War I UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. UP) -President Salvador Allende of Chile accused International Tele phone and Telegraph Co. on Mon- of trying to start civil war in country. He told other poor countries to beware of powerful il.S. firms. "We are witnessing a pitched battle between the great trans national corporations and sover eign states,” he declared in an minute speech to a packed ses- »ion of the 132-nation U.S. Gen eral Assembly. He recalled the thoughts of Thomas Jefferson that merchants claim no countries and are. inter ested only in profits. ITT’s chairman and president, Harold S. Geneen, was not avail able for comment in response to Allende’s charges. Allende, coming here from a visit to Mexico, said ITT had tried to prevent his taking office after the 1970 election through terrorist activities that culminat ed in the assassination of Gen. Rene Schneider, army comman der-in-chief. “Before the conscience of the world I accuse the ITT of at tempting to bring about civil war in my country,” he said. “That is what we call imperialist action.” the Crown and Anchor Inn on Hwy. 30, 1.7 miles east of the Hwy. 6 bypass. The 7 p.m. dinner includes an 8-ounce char-broiled chopped sir loin and trimmings at $3.50 per person. Reservations must be made by 5 p.m. Monday at 846- 1223 or 846-7578. West emphasized the club meet ings are open to anyone interested in TAMU. Bumgardner, best known as “Coach Bum,” is completing his first year as academic counselor for Aggie athletes. The Wichita Falls native played football at UT in 1942, then served three years in the armed forces during World War II before returning to Texas in 1946. He was an All- America end in 1947. “Coach Bum” played corner- back for the Detroit Lions in 1948, then started a coaching career that included one year at Denison and 19 years as head coach-athletic director at San Aneglo College. DRUMS TOLLED Monday afternoon for naval academy graduate Lt. Thomas S. Moore (’65) as he marched through the Corps area quadrangle after losing his bet on the Army- Navy game with Capt. Edward Schillo, a 1964 graduate of the U. S. Military Academy. Moore and his lone bass drum mer were accompanied only by the few choice words he muttered as he circled the area. Occult Master Speaks Wednesday Masters of the Occult will be the subject when Daniel Cohen speaks to A&M students Wednes day. The Great Issues Committee is sponsoring this presentation at 8 p.m. in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom. Editor of Science Digest and one of America’s leading author ities on the supernatural, bizarre and occult is Daniel Cohen. He examines fact and fiction, history and legend, religion and super- Political Forum To Host Dan Rather CBS News White House Cor respondent Dan Rather will speak Wednesday at A&M in a Political Dan Rather Forum presentation. “The Press vs The Administra tion” will be the noon topic of the nationally prominent televi sion reporter-news analyst who was bom in Wharton, studied journalism at Sam Houston State and worked in Houston. A specialist on reporting na tional politics, he anchors the CBS Sunday News and has had many prominent coverage slots, on election night and at both na tional conventions. At the 1968 Democratic Con vention in Chicago, Rather took a nationally televised punch to the mid-section, thrown by a se curity guard who had been evict ing a Georgia delegate from the hall. He has had other run-ins and tum-offs. Rather kept a camera crew on the White House lawn past 10 p.m. on the night of a crucial U.N. Security Council de bate on the Israeli-Arab conflict, in hopes of getting a post-debate statement. As Time magazine reported it: “Enter, lawn left, President Lyn don Johnson and Lady Bird, hand in hand. Double take by Rather. Then: ‘Good evening, Mr. Presi dent.’ Pleasantries. The Presi dent and First Lady stroll on, then return to Rather. Cameras on by now, taping. Almost ca sually, the President tells Rather that developments had kept the U.S.-Russia detente intact, had helped save the U.N.” Among other things, Rather, learned there had been “some exchanges” with the U.S.S.R., the first hard news on the use of the hot line; that the Israeli were not going to give up easily what they had won and that the Presi dent did not feel that anything would stop the Israeli in pursuit of admitted goals: Jerusalem, the west bank of the Jordan, the Sy rian heights, Aqaba, the Suez. But it was a stifled scoop. President Johnson didn’t know the cameras were on, the press secre tary passed to Rather through a CBS executive. The material can be used as the basis of a news report, “but as for use of the taped interview itself, the Presi dent would Rather not,” Time stated. Rather’s talk will be at 12 noon in the Memorial Student Center Ballroom, Political Forum Chair man Mike Lindsey said. Admis sion will be 25 cents per student and $1 for others. Textbook Swap Begins Wednesday The A&M Student Government’s Textbook Exchange Service be gins Wednesday and will run from noon until 6 p.m. through Dec. 12. The project is a means for stu dents wishing to sell or purchase books to contact other people with books or in need. Students should call in and give their name, num ber and book. When someone calls in interest ed in that book, they will be given a number to call. The number to call to register is 845-5111. The project will be continued January 15 through 19. stition through the centuries. He is the author of such books as “The Modern Look at Mon sters,” “Monsters of the Occult,” “A Natural History of Unnatural Things,” and “Voodoo, Devils and the New Invisible World.” Cohen has an outgoing interest in the supernatural and refers to himself as a skeptical observer of the occult and bizarre. His predilection for fantasy has al ways been coupled with a science writer’s desire to know the facts behind the legends. “I have, over the past few years,” he writes, “crossed verbal swords with many of the leading lights in the field. My involve ment in the occult has led me to a number of televised debates with such figures as the late Bishop Pike, the medium Arthur Fod, and a host of assorted as trologers, palm readers, flying saucer ‘contactees’, and the like.” He recently spoke at the inter national parapsychology confer ence in France, and taught a course at the New School for Social Research in New York City on strange beliefs of modern times. Born in Chicago, Cohen attend ed public schools there, and then went on to the Chicago branch of the University of Illinois. Losing interest in biology, he switched to writing, and eventually became editor of the college paper. He graduated from the school of journalism at Illinois in 1959. After a job with Time, Inc., and 10 years on the staff of Science Digest magazine, he took the plunge — “with my heart in my University National Bank ‘On the side of Texas A&M.” —Adv. mouth” — and turned to free lance writing. Cohen’s research and writing have left him little time for his hobbies — hiking and animals. However, having been a city boy all his life, he finds that he enjoys the isolation of his farmhouse in the country. He and his wife, Susan, and their two-year-old daughter, Theodora, live with two dogs and two cats in Monticello, New York. Admission to Cohen’s lecture will be 25 cents for students and $1 for non-students. MILNER SPIRITS took a turn for the better Saturday as a group of dorm residents matched efforts to put up a two-piece Christmas tree on the Ross St. porch roof, com plete with lights and tinsel. Gary Anderson, (on top of lad der) spearheaded the Yuletide adventure.